Norris wants title win âby fighting and beatingâ Verstappen
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Lando Norris is 62 points behind leader Max Verstappen in the driversâ title race
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Lando Norris says he wants to try to earn the world title on merit, despite McLaren asking his team-mate Oscar Piastri to support the Briton if necessary.
McLaren team principal Andrea Stella told BBC Sport the team would âbiasâ their operations towards Norris as they seek to win the driversâ title as well as the constructorsâ championship this season.
Norris said he was âthankfulâ for the teamâs decision but said: âI donât want to be given a championship.
âYes, it would be great to have a championship, and short term you feel amazing, but I donât think youâd be proud of that in the long run. Itâs not how I want to win a championship.â
Norris heads into this weekendâs Azerbaijan Grand Prix 62 points behind championship leader Max Verstappen of Red Bull, with a maximum of 232 points available in the remaining eight races.
McLaren are just eight points behind Red Bull in the constructorsâ championship, with Ferrari a further 31 adrift.
Norris added: âI want to win it by fighting against Max and beating Max, beating my competitors and proving Iâm the best on track. Thatâs how I want to race.â
Stella made it clear that McLaren had not decided to ask Piastri to back Norris under any circumstances.
âThe overall concept is we are incredibly determined to win, but we want to win in the right way,â he said.
âWe [will] bias our support to Lando but we want to do it without too much compromise on our principles.
âOur principles are that the team interest always comes first. Sportsmanship for us is important in the overall way we go racing â and then we want to be fair to both drivers.â
Piastri said: âThe team have asked me to help out, and Iâve said for the last few races that if I was asked, then I would.
âOf course naturally, as a driver, itâs never an easy thing or a simple thing to agree to. But again, thereâs a much bigger picture in play than just myself.â
Both Norris and Piastri played down the idea the Australian might be asked to sacrifice a win for his team-mate.
Norris said: âProbably not. In general, probably for lower positions, but if heâs fought for a win and heâs deserving of a win, then he deserves to win.
âOscar is still fighting for his own racing, heâs still going out and doing his stuff. And it could be that thereâs no time this year that he needs to help me.
âItâs more that Iâve got Oscarâs help when needs be, but heâs still going out with that intent of every session of fighting for himself.â
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Piastri, 23, said: âIt still needs some more discussions but the main point is itâs not just going to be me pulling over for Lando every race because thatâs how none of us, including Lando, want to race.
âTrying to go through all the scenarios is impossible. We donât want to discuss that publicly, but the main one is if we feel one has done a much better job on a weekend, whichever way it is, we want that person to be rewarded. And thatâs where it becomes a little bit tricky still.â
Norris needs to gain an average of just under eight points a weekend to beat Verstappen to the title.
He has done that over the last two races in the Netherlands and Italy, but it remains a tall order as the Dutchman remains the highest scoring driver over the last 10 races.
Verstappen struggled at the last race in Italy, qualifying seventh and finishing sixth, and has not won for six races. But he has won seven races this season and no other driver has more than two victories.
Verstappen said: âMonza wasnât good for us. We have analysed a lot of things and itâs time to try to be better and letâs see how this weekend will go.
âWe learned a lot from Monza, but it is a work in progress and itâs not like we can turn these things around from one to the other weekend. But we are working on it.
âI hope from now we can shift it in the right direction. How long that will take, I donât know. But I believe we can do a much better job than we did in Monza and the last few races.â
The 26-year-old said after the race in Italy that both titles were ânot realisticâ based on Red Bullâs form there.
Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton added Verstappen was âstill a very long way aheadâ.
McLarenâs decision to change their philosophy of allowing their drivers to race came after doing so backfired in Italy.
Having qualified one-two, Piastri overtook Norris on the first lap in a move that allowed Ferrariâs Charles Leclerc to sneak into second place, from where he went on to win.
Leclerc has been on pole in Baku for the last three years and has to be considered a strong contender for success on Sunday.
He said: âI would expect quite a good weekend for us but we donât expect to be at the level of McLaren or Red Bull.â