McLaren has ominous pace, Lewis Hamilton has work to do: 5 takeaways from F1’s season-opener

McLaren has ominous pace, Lewis Hamilton has work to do: 5 takeaways from F1’s season-opener
Lando Norris heads to the second round of the Formula 1 season in China with a lead over champion Max Verstappen after winning a thrilling race in Australia. (AP)
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Updated 17 March 2025

McLaren has ominous pace, Lewis Hamilton has work to do: 5 takeaways from F1’s season-opener

McLaren has ominous pace, Lewis Hamilton has work to do: 5 takeaways from F1’s season-opener
  • Among the takeaways ahead of Sunday’s race in Shanghai are that McLaren is the team to beat and that Lewis Hamilton and Ferrari have a lot of work to do
  • Lando Norris heads to the second round of the Formula 1 season in China with a lead over champion Max Verstappen after winning a thrilling race in Australia

Lando Norris heads to the second round of the Formula 1 season in China with a lead over champion Max Verstappen after winning a thrilling race in Australia.
Ahead of Sunday’s race in Shanghai, here are five takeaways from the season-opening Australian Grand Prix:
McLaren is the team to beat
Without the rain and the safety car, the Australian Grand Prix might not have been much of a contest. The two McLarens of Norris and Oscar Piastri quickly built a lead of more than 15 seconds to Verstappen in third early in the race. The McLarens were also three-tenths of a second faster than anyone else in qualifying. So much for preseason predictions that this year could be exceptionally close between multiple teams.
Norris acknowledged McLaren are favorites but warned the team shouldn’t get complacent. “If you start thinking things are good and groovy, that’s when you get caught,” he said. “We will have races where we struggle.”
Hamilton and Ferrari have work to do
Lewis Hamilton briefly led on his Ferrari debut. Unfortunately for the seven-time champion, a strategy blunder meant Ferrari left Hamilton and his new teammate Charles Leclerc on dry tires in increasingly heavy rain. “Missed a big opportunity,” Hamilton told Ferrari over the radio. Hamilton finished 10th, two places behind Leclerc.
Hamilton and Ferrari may need to work on their communication. After more than a decade working with Peter “Bono” Bonnington at Mercedes, Hamilton was frustrated at regular radio updates from his new engineer Riccardo Adami. “Leave me to it, please,” he said repeatedly.
Lawson’s old teammate may be his closest rival
No one expected Liam Lawson, in his 12th career F1 race, to beat his four-time champion teammate Verstappen. However, Lawson also underperformed compared to Yuki Tsunoda, his old teammate, after being picked over Tsunoda for the Red Bull seat. Lawson qualified 18th and made little progress before crashing out. Tsunoda qualified fifth and was competitive, though a team strategy error meant he finished 12th. If Lawson doesn’t improve, Red Bull could face even more scrutiny of its decision to pick him.
Antonelli is the standout rookie
Formula 1’s biggest rookie class in years struggled — with one big exception. The 18-year-old Andrea Kimi Antonelli became the second-youngest driver ever to score F1 points, behind only Verstappen, as he finished fourth with a strong drive from 16th.
Of the other drivers starting their first full F1 seasons, Lawson, Sauber’s Gabriel Bortoleto and Alpine’s Jack Doohan crashed out, Racing Bulls’ Isack Hadjar crashed before the start and Haas’ Oliver Bearman was the last finisher in 14th.
Teamwork helps Williams make its mark
Alex Albon benefited from his new teammate as he finished fifth for Williams’ best result since 2021. Carlos Sainz, Jr. crashed out early but joined the team staff on the pit wall to offer Albon advice over the radio on how best to handle the rapidly changing weather. “We’re a very bonded team,” Albon said.


Garnacho equalizer saves Chelsea in Qarabag draw

Updated 1 min 9 sec ago

Garnacho equalizer saves Chelsea in Qarabag draw

Garnacho equalizer saves Chelsea in Qarabag draw
Enzo Maresca’s side were in danger of an embarrassing loss at the Tofiq Bahramov Stadium
Former Manchester United winger Garnacho came off the bench to bail out the Blues with his composed finish after the interval

BAKU: Alejandro Garnacho spared Chelsea’s blushes as the Argentine’s equalizer rescued a 2-2 draw against Qarabag in the Champions League on Wednesday.
Enzo Maresca’s side were in danger of an embarrassing loss at the Tofiq Bahramov Stadium in Baku after falling behind in the first half.
Estevao Willian gave Chelsea an early lead but Leandro Andrade equalized before Marko Jankovic converted a penalty to give the Azerbaijani minnows hope of a famous upset.
Former Manchester United winger Garnacho came off the bench to bail out the Blues with his composed finish after the interval.
Both sides have seven points from their first four matches in the league phase, leaving them in contention for the top eight finish that secures automatic qualification for the last 16.
While two-time European champions Chelsea have spent over £1.5 billion ($1.9 billion) on new signings in the last three seasons, Qarabag’s total transfer outlay since 2020 is less than £7 million.
Despite that financial disparity, Chelsea found it hard to subdue their spirited hosts and they made the five-and-half-hour trip home still without a Champions League away win since October 2022.
Mockingly nicknamed “carrier bag” on their disappointing debut in the Champions League group stage eight years ago, Qarabag have proved a surprise package in this season’s competition.
They staged a superb comeback to win 3-2 at Benfica, then beat Copenhagen 2-0 at home and Chelsea were the latest to find them a tough nut to crack.
Chelsea’s players were kept on UK time while in Baku to mitigate the effects of the four-hour time difference ahead of Saturday’s Premier League clash with Wolves at Stamford Bridge, which is less than 72 hours after they return to London.
The Blues didn’t arrive in Baku until the early hours of Wednesday morning, so Maresca made seven changes from Saturday’s win at Tottenham in a bid to keep his team fresh.

- Garnacho to the rescue -

Estevao gave Chelsea’s inexperienced team a deserved lead in the 16th minute after a vibrant opening.
Picked out by Andrey Santos’ pass, Estevao shifted the ball onto his left foot and hit a low drive from 12 yards that beat Qarabag keeper Mateusz Kochalski at his near post.
It was the precocious 18-year-old’s fourth goal in all competitions this season.
Brazil forward Estevao is the third-youngest player in Champions League history to score in each of his first two starts in the tournament behind Ethan Nwaneri and Kylian Mbappe.
But Chelsea failed to build on that promising start and they were punished for sloppy defending in the 29th minute.
Camilo Duran stole possession from Chelsea defender Jorrel Hato and cut inside Tosin Adarabioyo for a shot that cannoned back off the post to Leandro Andrade, who slotted a clinical finish into the far corner.
Qarabag had the momentum and they struck again in the 39th minute as Chelsea’s lack of experience started to show.
The hapless Hato lost possession on the edge of his own area and conceded a penalty after blocking Duran’s cross with his outstretched arm.
Jankovic sent Robert Sanchez the wrong way from the spot to leave Chelsea in disarray at the interval.
Maresca introduced Garnacho, Enzo Fernandez and Liam Delap for the second half and the triple change paid instant dividends.
Delap picked out Garnacho and the 21-year-old lashed a fierce strike past Kochalski from the edge of the area for his second goal since arriving in August.
Fernandez almost emulated Garnacho’s impact with an instinctive snap-shot that Kochalski tipped over.
Chelsea laid seige to the Qarabag goal in the dying minutes, but Fernandez drilled narrowly over from distance before Garnacho’s close-range effort was repelled by Kochalski.