McLaren Are
Back.
From DNS in China to Sprint win in Miami. From "forgotten contenders" to a double podium. After their first proper upgrade, the question isn't whether McLaren are quick. It's whether they can catch Mercedes in time.
The Story
Six weeks ago, McLaren looked finished. The reigning constructors' champions, with the reigning drivers' champion, had managed exactly one finish from four cars in the first two races. Piastri crashed on the way to the grid in Australia. Both cars failed to start in China. The MCL40 was being described in some corners of the paddock as "a development disaster."
Today, after Miami, that same team won a Sprint, took a double podium in the Grand Prix, and the team principal is openly saying they want to defend both titles. The fastest turnaround story of 2026 has a name — and it's papaya orange.
So is this real? Or is this Miami flattering them because the circuit suits McLaren's car philosophy? Let's break it all down.
The Brutal Math
McLaren are 80 points behind Mercedes. With 20 races remaining and a maximum of around 44 points per Grand Prix weekend (with Sprints), that's not impossible — but it requires roughly a 4-point swing per race for the rest of the season. McLaren scored 33 points in Miami. Mercedes scored 37. Yes, you read that right. Even on a great weekend for McLaren, they still lost ground.
How We Got Here — 4 Race Timeline
🏁 The McLaren 2026 Story So Far
Disaster Number One
Piastri crashes on the way to the grid. Doesn't even take the start. Norris finishes P5. 10 points total. The defending champions left Melbourne staring at a 35-point deficit to Mercedes.
Disaster Number Two
The MCL40's 1000th F1 entry as a team. Both cars fail to start. Zero points. Internet meltdown. Reigning champion situation suddenly looking ugly. The "is this a development year?" conversation started here.
The First Sign Of Life
Piastri finishes P2. McLaren's first podium of the year, and Norris's pace is better. The car can clearly do things. They just need the breakages to stop. Stella starts hinting at a major Miami upgrade in pre-race media.
The Comeback
Norris takes the first non-Mercedes pole and Sprint win of 2026. McLaren get a 1-2 in the Sprint. Both drivers finish on the podium in the Grand Prix (P2 + P3). +47 points across the weekend. McLaren are now P3 in constructors, 6 points behind Ferrari.
What's Actually New On The Car
McLaren brought seven new parts to Miami (Ferrari brought 11, but McLaren's were more effective). Here's what changed:
New Floor
The biggest performance gain. Revised vortex generators improve underbody flow at low ride heights.
Bodywork Revamp
Repackaged sidepods and engine cover for cleaner airflow toward the rear. Less drag, more downforce.
Brake Ducts
Reshaped to manage heat better and reduce tyre graining — their biggest weakness in early races.
Rear Wing
Optimised for Miami's specific drag-vs-downforce balance. More efficient on the long straights.
Cooling Architecture
Redesigned internal cooling to allow the Mercedes power unit to run closer to peak deployment for longer.
Aero Efficiency
Norris's words: "Nice to feel some grip again." Tells you everything about what was missing before.
"Our development pathway has lots in the pipeline, with parts planned for Canada and a few more in Monaco, and Spain. We are in the fight, and we believe this sets the stage for a very interesting championship battle for the fans and F1."
The 3 Things That Will Decide Their Title Bid
The Norris + Piastri Pairing
Andrea Stella has openly said: "From a driver's point of view, we are probably the strongest pair." And he's not wrong. Norris is the reigning world champion. Piastri scored a podium in Japan with a worse car than McLaren has now. Mercedes have Russell and a 19-year-old rookie. Ferrari have a frustrated Hamilton and an erratic Leclerc. McLaren just have two of the five best drivers on the grid, both fast, both stable, both ready.
High-Speed Corners (And Mercedes Are Hiding More)
Stella's own admission post-Miami: "If we see the behaviour of the car in the corners, they are faster than us. The corners in which they are mainly faster are the high-speed corners." Look at the race data: Antonelli closed the gap to Norris in the first stint and opened it in the last. Even with the upgrade, McLaren are still slower than Mercedes overall — especially in fast corners. And Mercedes only brought a minor upgrade to Miami. They have a bigger one waiting for Canada.
The Development War
The most important factor isn't current pace — it's development rate. Since 2023, McLaren have been F1's benchmark developers: they went from backmarkers to champions in 18 months. Canada brings another upgrade. Monaco brings another. Spain brings more. If McLaren can find more performance faster than Mercedes can find it, the gap closes. If they can't, this is a development year and 2027 is their next title shot.
The Driver Battle: Norris vs Piastri Through 4 Rounds
⚔ Inside The Garage
What The Paddock Is Saying
"McLaren's gains in Miami may have exceeded even their own expectations."
"It's nice to feel some grip again and reward the people who put a lot of work into this. I've always loved Miami."
"We have just delivered our first upgrade. We know we can further develop our car."
"Any of the top four teams could win this year's championship."
The Championship Math
📝 Can McLaren Actually Win The Constructors?
4 Things McLaren Need For The Title
Out-Develop Mercedes In Canada
The Canada upgrade is the moment of truth. If McLaren find more time than Mercedes do, the title fight is real. If not, this is a 2027 fight.
Solve High-Speed Cornering
Mercedes are still faster through fast corners. Until McLaren find that pace, Antonelli has a clear pace advantage at most circuits.
Zero Reliability Issues
The China DNS cost them around 40 points. They cannot have another one. Every retirement makes the math impossible.
An Antonelli Mistake Or Two
The kid is good. But he's 19. He had a five-second penalty in the Miami Sprint. McLaren need a couple of those to convert into bigger errors.
The honest answer to "are McLaren in the title fight?" is yes — with footnotes.
The McLaren that disappeared in March is now the McLaren that took a Sprint win, a double podium, and brought a Sprint pole with a 0.222s gap to second. That's title-contender pace. Stella has been clear that more upgrades are coming. Norris and Piastri are arguably the best pair on the grid. The development engine in Woking is the most proven in modern F1.
But Mercedes haven't even unleashed their big Canada upgrade yet. Antonelli has lost places at the start of every race and still won three of four. The deficit is 80 points, and even on McLaren's best weekend, that gap grew.
Our verdict: McLaren can win individual races starting from Canada. They can absolutely make this a four-team championship battle. But to take the constructors' title from a team that's won every Grand Prix in 2026 and hasn't shown its full hand? That requires McLaren to be genuinely faster than Mercedes by mid-summer. Not close. Faster.
The papaya is back. The fight is on. Canada in three weeks is now the most important race of the season — not because of who wins, but because of who develops faster.
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