Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Motorsport
Motorsport
Sport

McLaren can catch Red Bull in a year on current F1 trajectory - Stella

McLaren has enjoyed something of a renaissance under Stella's leadership following a difficult start to the 2023 season, scoring just 14 points in the opening five rounds. Heavy revisions to last year's MCL60 chassis, which came to life during the Austrian GP weekend, ensured that the team returned to challenging for poles and podium finishes.

This rate of development continued and, building on that for 2024, McLaren has consolidated its position in the upper half of the field - and has scored 96 points in the same frame of reference, 82 more than last year.

Stella explained that the focus was on maintaining that rate of development; if it does so, he believes the Woking squad can realistically battle against Red Bull for honours in 2025.

"I think overall, if we take the 12-month period, we have developed more than anybody else. I think Red Bull did not develop very much last year. Clearly, they were working quite a lot in the background because they innovated the car dramatically," Stella reflected.

"And to innovate the car like they did - it takes months of redesign. They were doing all this work, and then when they came with a new car, it was a big step.

"So even if apparently we have lost some ground, we lost some ground because we gained so much ground before and while they were not developing.

"That's why we need to look at things over the long period. Over the long period, we are in a strong trajectory. For me, this is also what we say internally: if we keep this trajectory of development for the next 12 months, then why not? We may reach Red Bull.

(Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images)

McLaren will introduce a series of updates at this weekend's Miami Grand Prix, although Stella concedes that they will not be as wide-ranging as some of the packages introduced last season.

Regardless, he believes that these will present a "decent step" per the team's current simulation, assuming the team's current correlation with the real world remains strong.

"We're going to have some upgrades in Miami, let's see how they perform. And then like for everyone, there's a lot of people at the factory that are all focused on generating developments and it's always a battle of development.

"That's the real job in Formula 1, just constantly improve cars. And that's what we have to do.

"This upgrade will not be as big as the two that we had delivered last year in Austria and Singapore. But it should be a decent step; it should be noticeable. If things correlate with our expectation, with the wind tunnel numbers, for instance, and with the computer simulation.

"It's always a big if. Because, you know, even if the hit rate of this correlation has been good over the last 12 months, there's always possible surprises."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.