SHANGHAI (AP) - McLaren's dominance, Lewis Hamilton's bid to bounce back after a disappointing debut for Ferrari, and the passing of Eddie Jordan have generated headlines as Formula 1 prepares for its first Sprint weekend of the season at the Chinese Grand Prix.
Hamilton aims to get closer to McLaren as China hosts the season’s first F1 sprint weekend
SHANGHAI (AP) - McLaren's dominance, Lewis Hamilton's bid to bounce back after a disappointing debut for Ferrari, and the passing of Eddie Jordan have generated headlines as Formula 1 prepares for its first Sprint weekend of the season at the Chinese Grand Prix.
Lando Norris arrived in Shanghai atop the drivers' standings for the first time following his win at the season-opening Australian Grand Prix last Sunday, but it was his qualifying pace for McLaren - and not just holding off Red Bull's Max Verstappen - that had his rivals on edge ahead of practice.
Mercedes driver George Russell went so far as to say McLaren could win every race this season, describing its raw pace advantage as "bigger than Red Bull has ever had". But, while Norris’ teammate Oscar Piastri strongly refuted the claim - stating the form would change between rounds - the rest of the paddock wasn't so sure.
"They’re definitely ahead," Ferrari's Charles Leclerc said. "The gap in qualifying, the gap that there was (in Australia, 0.385sec to the nearest non-McLaren) is more or less what there is.”