Car back to Norris' liking as "small margin" costs him Japanese GP pole

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Lando Norris insists he is much happier with his McLaren Formula 1 car than he was in China - despite being beaten to Japanese Grand Prix pole by Max Verstappen.

The current championship leader bemoaned small margins for missing out on pole by 0.012 seconds at Suzuka as Verstappen surprisingly took the top spot ahead of both Norris and his McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri.

Throughout the Chinese Grand Prix weekend a fortnight ago Norris spoke of how difficult he found the car to drive, with small errors costing him in both qualifying sessions and the sprint race in Shanghai.

Now he feels in a better position, despite having been pipped to pole by Verstappen and going quickest in FP1 and FP3, while Piastri was top of the pile in second practice.

“I was pretty happy with my lap, honestly,” said Norris.

“I tried pushing a good amount more in Q3 run one and it didn't work out, clearly. So I just had to kind of peg it back a lot.

“I was happy with the balance and happy with the car at the end. So I mean, the margin is so small… but just not enough for pole today.

“[I’m] much happier than China, yeah. I mean, the car's a lot more back to my liking. I've got some front end in the car, and I'm much, much happier with that.

Lando Norris, McLaren

Lando Norris, McLarenZak Mauger / Motorsport Images

Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

“I've been feeling confident all weekend. If it was a sprint race, I feel like I'd be much further ahead.

“But everyone's good enough that, by the time you get to qualifying, they kind of catch up a bit. I've been feeling good, but the car's been feeling good from the off as well.

“We've been chipping away, and I think between both of us, we've been quickest in every session, bar this one. So it's a little frustrating, but I think the corners I still struggle with and the corners I'm still not happiest with are the corners I still just don't have the front-end and I don't have the grip in the car when I need it from the front.

“So it's clear what suits me, what doesn't, or just what allows me to be quick and what doesn't. China was one of those weaker tracks and come here and the car's a lot better.”

Norris defeated Verstappen by less than a second to win the season-opening Australian Grand Prix, a race where downpours certainly added to the spectacle.

With rain forecast overnight at Suzuka and potential for showers on Sunday, Norris was not prepared to predict what might happen as he once again battles Verstappen off the line.

“No one knows what the weather's going to be like tomorrow, so no point trying to think of too many things,” he said.

“I think we'll do our homework tonight. It's probably going to be a bit of a race like ...

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