As promising as he is, he is not in an easy situation. He’s coming up against Norris, who will be in his fifth season as a McLaren race driver, and is still very much on an upward trajectory. We’ll never know much of last year’s performance disparity between the two drivers was down to Norris’s brilliance, and how much to Ricciardo’s personal struggles, but many observers think that there was a decent contribution from the former.
Certainly Norris coped better with the MCL36, which appeared to take a lot of taming. He was often keen to point out that the car wasn’t exactly honed for his driving style, and like Ricciardo he too had to adapt.
Piastri will face a steep learning curve, but on the plus side the team went through the process of bringing on a rookie as recently as 2019 with Norris, so that knowledge will help.
“Piastri will have enough talent, process and intelligence to find his own way”
As well as having to focus some of its energies on educating its new guy, the team will miss the feedback it would get from having two experienced drivers. For all his struggles Ricciardo brought a great deal of useful knowledge to the party. However the team remains confident that it can successfully address that issue of Piastri’s inexperience.
“I think the important point is to have continuity with Lando, he keeps the kind of reference,” Stella said at the end of last year.
“And it’s a reference that we know very well, because we have gone through the development of Lando together with him. And there has certainly been a development from a technical point of view, from a driving point of view, racecraft point of view.
“So I think we know this very well. It will become a frame of reference for Oscar as well. And this is in terms of not only Oscar’s performance himself, but also understanding the car.”
Key says these days data often trumps driver feedback: “We will have a new car, we want to improve some of the things, and drivers are certainly important in relation to that, even though F1, unlike some other sports, relies a lot on numbers, which means we are lucky, as people dealing with that. I think if it was a motorbike, it would be more difficult to understand what is the role of the rider here? What is the role of the bike?
“But in F1, you pretty much get a very good idea from the numbers, what your competitiveness is. With the drivers, you deal with subtleties, the final percentage of your performance, so I wouldn’t be too scared. If you give me good numbers, I will take it, even if we don’t have very clear references from the drivers.