McLaren’s Miami upgrade success points to even stronger form in coming races

Lap time watch: 2024 Miami GP

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Does McLaren’s Miami Grand Prix victory, aided by their latest upgrade package, signal the team will be a much more competitive force over the coming races?

On the face of it there are strong reasons to think not. Lando Norris qualified behind both Red Bulls and both Ferraris, and was elevated into first place by a well-timed Safety Car period. The only one of the two McLaren drivers to have all of the new parts for the MCL38, Norris was 0.4% off the absolute pace in Miami, no better than they managed earlier in the season at Suzuka, where the gap was 0.33%.

But there are other signs that Norris’ breakthrough victory owed plenty to the upgrades McLaren introduced last weekend. Miami has tended not to be a strong track for this team, and at other venues which suit their car better they may be even more competitive.

Last year McLaren were 1.82% off the pace at Miami, one of their worst performances of the season. Yes, this was before the first of their game-changing upgrades that year, but four weeks later in Spain with much the same car they were just 0.7% off.

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Lando Norris, McLaren, Miami International Autodrome, 2024
Analysis: What’s new in McLaren’s huge Miami Grand Prix update
The Miami weekend was complicated by a lack of practice time owing to the sprint race format. This was exacerbated by the interaction between Miami’s unusual track surface and Pirelli’s often fickle rubber, which left teams switching between medium and soft compounds in qualifying. In qualifying for the sprint race Norris achieved the fastest time of the whole session on medium rubber in the second stage, but couldn’t beat it when he put softs on a few minutes later.

When it came down to consistent running in the race, McLaren wrung more out of their tyres for longer than even Red Bull could manage. That was what made Norris a threat during the Safety Car period to begin with: McLaren wisely avoided reacting to Sergio Perez’s pit stop ahead of him, and left Norris out for lap after lap on the medium rubber to bring him into contention.

McLaren improved their lap times by more than any other team last weekend; indeed, only two other teams managed to lap quicker in Miami than they had 12 months earlier. The team which struggled the most was Aston Martin, who couldn’t get within a second of their best time at a track where Fernando Alonso finished on the podium a month ago.

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Pierre Gasly, Alpine, Miami International Autodrome, 2024
Alpine also posted some encouraging lap times
Alonso managed to pass Esteban Ocon for ninth place in the race. Alpine bagged their first points, and made a surprise appearance in the top half of the lap time rankings. However this was thanks to a blinder of a lap by Pierre Gasly in the first phase of qualifying, which had he been able to duplicate in Q2 would have got him into Q3.

But Gasly was far from alone in being unable to consistently replicate his best lap times. No driver managed to put their three quickest sector times together over a single lap.

Even taking that into account, McLaren was no better than the third-quickest team on single-lap pace. But given their past weakness in Miami, and the performance they showed over a race stint, the team can approach the coming races with more confidence they can take the fight to Red Bull and Ferrari.

Sector times

P.#DriverS1S2S3Ultimate lap (deficit)
11Max Verstappen28.783 (1)33.467 (2)24.875 (2)1’27.125 (+0.116)
211Sergio Perez28.85 (3)33.44 (1)24.852 (1)1’27.142 (+0.318)
316Charles Leclerc28.793 (2)33.524 (3)24.949 (6)1’27.266 (+0.116)
455Carlos Sainz Jnr28.874 (4)33.571 (5)24.936 (4)1’27.381 (+0.074)
581Oscar Piastri28.93 (6)33.53 (4)24.981 (9)1’27.441 (+0.234)
64Lando Norris28.928 (5)33.585 (6)24.95 (8)1’27.463 (+0.131)
744Lewis Hamilton29.02 (7)33.635 (8)25.022 (11)1’27.677 (+0.020)
863George Russell29.125 (8)33.678 (9)25.02 (10)1’27.823 (+0.244)
927Nico Hulkenberg29.281 (12)33.748 (14)24.902 (3)1’27.931 (+0.215)
1010Pierre Gasly29.334 (13)33.605 (7)25.022 (11)1’27.961 (+0.015)
1118Lance Stroll29.271 (10)33.783 (18)24.949 (6)1’28.003 (+0.174)
1222Yuki Tsunoda29.27 (9)33.689 (10)25.072 (15)1’28.031 (+0.136)
1331Esteban Ocon29.28 (11)33.769 (15)25.065 (13)1’28.114 (+0.095)
1423Alexander Albon29.498 (16)33.774 (16)25.067 (14)1’28.339 (+0.004)
1520Kevin Magnussen29.51 (17)33.725 (11)25.126 (18)1’28.361 (+0.258)
1614Fernando Alonso29.467 (14)33.778 (17)25.118 (17)1’28.363 (+0.064)
172Logan Sargeant29.724 (20)33.736 (13)24.944 (5)1’28.404 (+0.083)
1877Valtteri Bottas29.47 (15)33.849 (19)25.105 (16)1’28.424 (+0.039)
193Daniel Ricciardo29.525 (18)33.727 (12)25.248 (20)1’28.500 (+0.117)
2024Zhou Guanyu29.624 (19)33.903 (20)25.196 (19)1’28.723 (+0.101)

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Field performance

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2024 Miami Grand Prix

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Author information

Keith Collantine
Lifelong motor sport fan Keith set up RaceFans in 2005 - when it was originally called F1 Fanatic. Having previously worked as a motoring...

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15 comments on “McLaren’s Miami upgrade success points to even stronger form in coming races”

  1. It hurts me to see Aston Martin turning into garbage and Alonso being stuck there for the short rest of his career.
    People will quickly say “Oh, but the new facility, new wind tunnel coming” etc., but McLaren had all of those and was garbage for a decade.

    1. It’s an unfortunate truth in F1 that the most talented and most exciting drivers are rarely the most successful ones.

      Reply moderated
      1. You know he has two world championships to his name. Part of the reason it’s not more is his own doing.

        When people are asked about greatest drivers never to have won a title, the discussion usually ends up with Stirling Moss, Ronnie Peterson, Didier Pironi, Gilles Villeneuve. I can’t think of anybody remotely recent who I think would get close to that group.

        1. Montoya perhaps. I feel he is the only one aside from Hakkinen who troubled Schumacher to some degree.

          1. Totally agree with that Moi. He left too soon…

      2. its like that in hollywood too.

    2. Paul (@frankjaeger)
      10th May 2024, 19:54

      Mclaren completed their wind tunnel late last year, beforehand they were using Toyota’s in Switzerland. I think part of the reason their upgrades are actually working is because of their in-house wind tunnel and new aero staff

  2. I think the team probably have to relearn some on-track aptitude, and maybe work on their preparation too. If they know where the problems are (apart from the clear 2nd driver issue, that is), they need not be in the weeds as long as McLaren was.

  3. no. lolz. wake me up when Pirelli makes tires that will last more than 1 qualy lap.

    1. no. lolz. wake me up when Pirelli makes tires that will last more than 1 qualy lap.

      I think you may have mistyped – surely you mean “when Pirelli make tyres that last a complete qualy lap”
      I think drivers were complaining about them barely lasting to turn 6 ??

  4. CheeseBucket
    10th May 2024, 23:32

    Imagine this, Mclaren didn’t get the car set up well due to the limited running due to it being a sprint race.

    Next race they get it right and go on to win the championship.

    I can dream! ;-)

  5. McLaren has made improvements but let’s not lose sight of the fact that VER was comfortably leading the race before he went off track damaging his car.

    1. Red Bull didn’t even have their power unit at full beans. Wonder if they will do that at the other US tracks this year (sigh).

  6. Sounds a bit like a Perez at season start kind of story. Let’s first see whether they at least once can repeat their form before we start to speculate wildly. There is already more than enough unsubstantiated news spread by nowadays media. It seems that in the era Trump literally anything goes and all truths can be fabricated by anyone.

    Reply moderated
  7. Sounds a bit like a Perez at season start kind of story. Let’s first see whether they at least once can repeat their form before we start to speculate wildly. There is already more than enough unsubstantiated news being spread.

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