Oscar Piastri came into the Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix expecting McLaren to fight at the front. He left it fifth, nearly a minute behind race winner Lewis Hamilton and 25 seconds adrift of team-mate Lando Norris — and without a clear explanation for any of it.
McLaren had looked quick in practice at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, fast enough that some expected a win bid. Instead Piastri qualified seventh and spent Sunday wrestling a car that never came to him.
"No, not really. I was trying a lot of different things and running into a lot of different problems," Piastri said, via RacingNews365 and other outlets, when asked whether he understood what had gone wrong. "So I think we were just struggling a lot with grip and tyre life, obviously. I don't have any answers at the moment. I'm sure there will be some answers later, but yeah, it was a surprise to struggle so much."
The gap to Norris was the hardest part to rationalise. Piastri said the two MCL40s were running near-identical setups — "Marginal stuff, but nothing major" — yet Norris stayed in the Mercedes fight while Piastri slid backwards.
What pace he did find came with a catch. "There were a few laps here and there that felt a little bit better, but that normally came at a price a few laps later, so it was just not an easy afternoon at all," he told Motorsport Week and others. He framed the weekend as a problem to solve rather than a one-off: "All I can hope is that we learn why it was so difficult from that."
Norris, who took third, saw the same race from the other side of the garage — and was honest about where McLaren sits. "Right now, we are just missing a little bit of everything to consistently fight for wins," he said. "We are making good progress and working exceptionally hard as a unit. Our competitors are doing a slightly better job at the moment."
He went further on the team's status after two seasons at the front: "I think it's tough for us to realise we're not at the same level as what we were. We don't have a car that is just good everywhere."
Team principal Andrea Stella offered the closest thing to a diagnosis. "Our analysis is very clear: we are reasonably competitive in the high-speed sections but need to add aerodynamic grip to improve in the medium- and low-speed corners, where we are currently losing out," he said. He pinpointed tyre handling as the day's real differentiator and admitted the strategy call may have been wrong: "The three-stop option may have been the better route. However, ultimately Lewis Hamilton looked the strongest on the day, with Ferrari in a condition to contest at the front regardless."
The context stings. Twelve months ago McLaren scored a Barcelona one-two led by Piastri. This time Ferrari's upgrade has turned the Scuderia into race winners, Mercedes remain a step clear, and McLaren's Miami revival looks less like a trend than a blip. Piastri did salvage one positive — "it is encouraging to see that on Lando's side, we were able to be in the fight with Mercedes" — and both he and Stella now point to Austria, on 28 June, as the place to prove Barcelona was the exception, not the rule.
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