
Won't matter once we're all dead – Lando Norris plays down F1 title battle
The title momentum swung back in Piastri's favour at last weekend's rain-hit round in Belgium. Norris started on pole position but allowed Piastri to swoop past in the treacherous conditions.
Lando Norris topped both practice session at the Hungaroring on Friday (Bradley Collyer/PA)
Norris was unable to stop Red Bull's Max Verstappen from taking his fourth consecutive championship last year, but such is McLaren's superiority, it is team-mate Piastri who has emerged as his sole rival for this season's crown.
Piastri has six wins to Norris' four but when asked if he needs to get under the Australian's skin to land his maiden F1 title, Norris replied: 'I don't enjoy that. In 200 years no one is going to care. We'll all be dead.
'I am trying to have a good time. I still care about it, and that's why I get upset sometimes and I get disappointed and I get angry at myself. And I think that shows just how much I care about winning and losing.
'But that doesn't mean I need to take it out on Oscar. I just don't get into those kind of things.'
Historically, intra-team title battles rarely end well in F1, but Norris continued: 'Yes, he (Piastri) is the guy I want to beat more than anyone else.
Oscar Piastri holds a 16-point championship lead over team-mate Norris (Bradley Collyer/PA)
'But if I don't beat him, then that's just because he has done a better job. I will do it the way I believe is best for me, and just because one person did it a few years ago, it doesn't mean you have to do that, too. I don't really care about those things.'
At the Hungaroring on Friday, Norris completed an impressive practice double – beating Piastri by just 0.019 seconds in the first session before extending his advantage to nearly three tenths later in the day.
Norris has never been out-qualified by a team-mate on his six previous visits here, and he will be encouraged by his showing in practice.
Over at Ferrari, Lewis Hamilton has won a record eight times in Hungary and has secured nine pole positions. But the 40-year-old, who remains without a podium in Ferrari colours, struggled for pace on Friday.
Lewis Hamilton finished sixth in practice for the Hungarian Grand Prix (Bradley Collyer/PA)
In the first session, he complained his car didn't 'feel good' and ran off the road at the first corner following a major lock-up. He ended the day in sixth, three tenths and as many places behind team-mate Charles Leclerc.
Verstappen ended speculation he could leave Red Bull at the end of the year by committing his future there for at least another season. However, he finished a distant 14th in practice, 1.1 seconds slower than Norris.
'I don't know what is going on,' said Verstappen over the radio. 'It is just undriveable.'
Verstappen is also facing a stewards' investigation after he threw a towel – seemingly left in the Dutchman's cockpit by accident – out of his car.

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Scotsman
3 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Lions lose battle but win war and their four Scots are modern greats
Australia salvage pride in rain-delayed final Test in Sydney Sign up to our Rugby Union newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... In the end, it proved to be a game too far for the British and Irish Lions. Their hopes of a series clean sweep were washed away in the Sydney rain as Nic White and Will Skelton inspired Australia to a deserved victory in the third and final Test. On a night when the threat of lightning forced the players off for almost 40 minutes at the start of the second half, the hosts adapted to the downpour, kept it simple and got under the skins of the Lions players. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Congratulations to Australia, they deserved to win,' said a magnanimous Andy Farrell. 'They played the conditions better than us.' Maro Itoje of the British and Irish Lions lifts the trophy after the tourists defeated Australia 2-1 in the Test series. | Getty Images Farrell's Lions still got to lift the silverware, Maro Itoje hoisting the Qatar Airways trophy. They lost the battle but won the war, defeating the Wallabies by two Tests to one and becoming the first Lions squad to win a series since the tourists of 2013, also 2-1 victors in Australia. Failed to emulate the 'Invincibles' They did not, however, manage to emulate Willie John McBride's 'Invincibles' of 1974 and go unbeaten for the whole tour. The defeat in Sydney followed eight successive wins on Australian soil for Farrell's squad. 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He at least had the consolation of scoring a try in the match and was among the Lions players collecting series winners' medals on the podium in Sydney. Finn Russell gripes well and truly silenced For Finn Russell, it was another bauble to add to his burgeoning collection from what has been an annus mirabilis. For all his talent, his lack of silverware has sometimes been cast up as a criticism but such gripes can now be silenced. The Scotland stand-off adds a Lions series triumph to the Premiership and Challenge Cup honours he won this season with Bath. For good measure, Russell also picked up the Lions' player of the series trophy from the team's main sponsor, Howden. The fly-half was one of four Scots to play in the Test series and all can now be considered modern greats of the Scottish game. Russell, Blair Kinghorn, Huw Jones and Sione Tuipulotu have proven themselves to be winners with their clubs and now with the Lions. The hope now is that their success can rub off on the national team. Getty Images Having pushed the Lions so close last weekend in Melbourne, Australia were desperate to salvage something from the series and they looked the hungrier side throughout. They took only seven minutes to score the first of their three tries, through Dylan Pietsch, and they never relinquished their lead. Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii played a big part in the score, taking out two Lions defenders with his footwork before playing a no-look pass which put Pietsch away in the corner. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Nic White was going out in style The conditions were terrible and it didn't pay to overplay. Australia were winning the battle of the breakdown and celebrating each mini-victory with relish. Skelton in particular was in the ears of his Lions rivals. White, meanwhile, was dictating play, determined to finish with a flourish in what was his final Test appearance. 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This match may have been a dead rubber but there was an intensity about the home side's play which sometimes spilled over into belligerence. White and Skelton were at the vanguard, mixing brilliant play with antagonism as they sought to disrupt the Lions. Taniela Tupou was on top in the scrum and the lineout was also a real cause for concern for the visitors who were making too many mistakes. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The Lions tried to move the ball wide but lacked any zip and Bundee Aki was in front of Kinghorn as received a pass from the Scot. Max Jorgensen took full advantage, collecting the spilt ball and rampaging up the right wing to score Australia's second try. Ben Donaldson, on for the injured Lynagh, converted to make it 15-0 on 55 minutes, leaving the Lions needing three scores. White left the field soon after, receiving the acclaim of the Sydney crowd. 'Nice career, well done,' said Amashukeli as the scrum-half trotted off. 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Daily Mirror
4 minutes ago
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Daily Mirror
4 minutes ago
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