Lando Norris: Difference between revisions

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'''Lando Norris''' ({{IPAc-en|n|ɒr|ɪ|s}}; born 13 November 1999) is a Belgian-British<ref>{{cite web |last=Osten |first=Phillip van |date=25 August 2020 |title=Spa feels like 'second home' Grand Prix for Lando Norris |url=https://f1i.com/news/381457-spa-feels-like-second-home-grand-prix-for-norris.html |access-date=29 August 2020 |website=F1i.com}}</ref> [[racing driver]] currently competing in [[Formula One]] with [[McLaren]], [[Formula One drivers from the United Kingdom|racing under the British flag]]. He won the [[F4 British Championship|MSA Formula championship]] in 2015, and the [[Toyota Racing Series]], [[Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0]] and [[Formula Renault 2.0 Northern European Cup]] in 2016. He also received the [[McLaren Autosport BRDC Award]] that year. He subsequently joined the [[McLaren Young Driver Programme]] in 2017 and won the [[2017 FIA Formula 3 European Championship]], competing with [[Carlin Motorsport]]. Consequently, he was promoted to the [[Formula 2 Championship|Formula 2]] Carlin team, where he finished second in [[2018 Formula 2 Championship|2018]], competing with [[Carlin Motorsport]]. He was then announced as a McLaren driver in 2018, alongside [[Carlos Sainz Jr.]] He achieved his first podium in Formula One at the [[2020 Austrian Grand Prix]] and his best finish is second in the [[2021 Italian Grand Prix]], finishing behind teammate [[Daniel Ricciardo]].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.formula1.com/en/results.html/2021/races/1076/italy/race-result.html | title=Standings }}</ref>
'''Lando Norris''' ({{IPAc-en|n|ɒr|ɪ|s}}; born 13 November 1999) is a British<ref>{{cite web |last=Osten |first=Phillip van |date=25 August 2020 |title=Spa feels like 'second home' Grand Prix for Lando Norris |url=https://f1i.com/news/381457-spa-feels-like-second-home-grand-prix-for-norris.html |access-date=29 August 2020 |website=F1i.com}}</ref> [[racing driver]] currently competing in [[Formula One]] with [[McLaren]], [[Formula One drivers from the United Kingdom|racing under the British flag]]. He won the [[F4 British Championship|MSA Formula championship]] in 2015, and the [[Toyota Racing Series]], [[Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0]] and [[Formula Renault 2.0 Northern European Cup]] in 2016. He also received the [[McLaren Autosport BRDC Award]] that year. He subsequently joined the [[McLaren Young Driver Programme]] in 2017 and won the [[2017 FIA Formula 3 European Championship]], competing with [[Carlin Motorsport]]. Consequently, he was promoted to the [[Formula 2 Championship|Formula 2]] Carlin team, where he finished second in [[2018 Formula 2 Championship|2018]], competing with [[Carlin Motorsport]]. He was then announced as a McLaren driver in 2018, alongside [[Carlos Sainz Jr.]] He achieved his first podium in Formula One at the [[2020 Austrian Grand Prix]] and his best finish is second in the [[2021 Italian Grand Prix]], finishing behind teammate [[Daniel Ricciardo]].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.formula1.com/en/results.html/2021/races/1076/italy/race-result.html | title=Standings }}</ref>


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Revision as of 13:47, 12 November 2022

Lando Norris
Norris in 2020
Born (1999-11-13) 13 November 1999 (age 24)
Bristol, England, United Kingdom
Formula One World Championship career
NationalityUnited Kingdom British
Car number4
Entries110 (110 starts)
Championships0
Wins1
Podiums16
Career points716
Pole positions1
Fastest laps6
First entry2019 Australian Grand Prix
Last entry2024 Miami Grand Prix
2021 position6th (160 pts)
WebsiteOfficial website
Previous series
201718
201617
2016
2016
2016
2016
2015
2015
2015
2015
2014
FIA Formula 2 Championship
FIA F3 European Championship
Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0
Formula Renault 2.0 NEC
BRDC British Formula 3 Championship
Toyota Racing Series
MSA Formula
BRDC Formula 4 Autumn Trophy
Italian Formula 4 Championship
ADAC Formula 4
Ginetta Junior Championship
Championship titles
2017
2016
2016
2016
2015
2014
FIA F3 European Championship
Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0
Formula Renault 2.0 NEC
Toyota Racing Series
MSA Formula
Karting World Championship
Awards
2021
2020
2019
2017
2016
2016
Autosport British Competition Driver of the Year
Autosport British Competition Driver of the Year
Autosport British Competition Driver of the Year
Autosport National Driver of the Year
McLaren Autosport BRDC Award
Autosport British Club Driver of the Year

Lando Norris (/nɒrɪs/; born 13 November 1999) is a British[3] racing driver currently competing in Formula One with McLaren, racing under the British flag. He won the MSA Formula championship in 2015, and the Toyota Racing Series, Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 and Formula Renault 2.0 Northern European Cup in 2016. He also received the McLaren Autosport BRDC Award that year. He subsequently joined the McLaren Young Driver Programme in 2017 and won the 2017 FIA Formula 3 European Championship, competing with Carlin Motorsport. Consequently, he was promoted to the Formula 2 Carlin team, where he finished second in 2018, competing with Carlin Motorsport. He was then announced as a McLaren driver in 2018, alongside Carlos Sainz Jr. He achieved his first podium in Formula One at the 2020 Austrian Grand Prix and his best finish is second in the 2021 Italian Grand Prix, finishing behind teammate Daniel Ricciardo.[4]

Personal life

Lando Norris was born in Bristol, to Adam and Cisca Norris. His father is a retired pensions manager,[5] and is one of Bristol's wealthiest people as well as the 501st-richest person in the country (as of 2018).[6] His mother Cisca (née Wauman) is from the Flanders region of Belgium.[7] He has three siblings, of which he is the second oldest; younger sisters Flo and Cisca, and an older brother Oliver, who was also involved in karting on a competitive level, until 2014.[8][9] Norris holds both British and Belgian citizenship,[10] and speaks a small amount of Flemish Dutch.[8][11] Norris was educated at Millfield School in Street, Somerset. He left school without taking his GCSEs,[12] but studied physics and mathematics with a full-time personal tutor.[13] His family later moved to Glastonbury to allow him to become a day pupil,[14] and to pursue his racing career, citing Valentino Rossi as an inspiration.[15] He initially resided in Woking near the McLaren team headquarters,[16] but later moved to Monaco in 2022, for financial reasons.[17]

Between August 2021 and September 2022 Norris was dating Portuguese model Luisinha Oliveira.[18] Norris has stated he and his girlfriend were subject to abuse and death threats from online trolls.[19][20][21]

Racing career

Early career

Norris racing for Mücke Motorsport in Formula 4 in 2015

After initially developing an interest in motorcycle racing, Norris's attention switched to four wheels after his father took him and his brother to watch a round of the Super 1 National Kart Championships at his local kart track.[22] He started his racing career at the age of seven when he claimed pole position at his first national event. In 2013, Norris competed in KF-Junior karting, winning the CIK FIA European Championship and the International Super Cup,[23][24] as well as the WSK Euro Series.[25] The following year he won the CIK-FIA KF World Championship with Ricky Flynn Motorsport, making him the youngest karting world champion.[26]

In 2014, Norris made his car racing debut in the Ginetta Junior Championship, a support series to the British Touring Car Championship. He finished third in the championship, winning four races and claiming the Rookie Cup. For 2015, Norris signed with Carlin Motorsport to drive in the newly established MSA Formula Championship (now known as the F4 British Championship). Norris took eight wins, ten pole positions, and fourteen total podiums to win the championship ahead of Ricky Collard and Colton Herta. He also made occasional appearances in the ADAC and Italian Formula 4 championships with Mücke Motorsport where he claimed six podiums from eight starts in the former.[26][27]

Norris racing at Monza during the 2016 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 championship

In January 2016, Norris travelled to New Zealand to compete in the Toyota Racing Series with the M2 Competition team. He achieved six race wins, including the New Zealand Grand Prix, and won the championship ahead of Jehan Daruvala. Norris then returned to Europe to race in the Formula Renault 2.0 category with Josef Kaufmann Racing, competing in both the Eurocup and Northern European Cup. He won both series, taking eleven race wins in total and recording ten consecutive pole positions in the latter. At the same time, Norris embarked on a part-time campaign in the BRDC British Formula 3 Championship and claimed four wins in eleven races. In October he made a guest appearance in the final round of the European Formula 3 Championship at the Hockenheimring in preparation for the Macau Grand Prix in November. Norris placed ninth in qualifying in Macau but was eliminated from the qualification race after crashing on the first lap. In the main race, he progressed from 27th on the grid to finish 11th.[27]

Norris at Silverstone during the 2017 Formula 3 European Championship

Norris raced full-time with Carlin in the 2017 European Formula 3 Championship,[28] and faced competition from Joel Eriksson, Maximilian Günther and Callum Ilott for the championship title. Norris finished on the podium in twenty of the thirty races, including nine wins, and recorded eight pole positions. He clinched the title with two races remaining, marking his fifth racing championship title in four years.[29] In November, Norris made his second appearance at the Macau Grand Prix. He was classified second in qualifying but dropped to seventh in the qualification race. He benefited from an accident between the leaders on the final lap to finish the Grand Prix second behind Dan Ticktum. On the following weekend, Norris made his FIA Formula 2 debut with Campos Racing, replacing Ralph Boschung for the final round at Yas Marina Circuit.[30]

Norris driving for Carlin Motorsport during the 2018 FIA Formula 2 Championship

Norris competed full-time in the 2018 FIA Formula 2 Championship, racing alongside Sérgio Sette Câmara at Carlin. Norris won the opening race at the Bahrain International Circuit from pole position, however, this would prove to be his only race victory of the season. He scored consistent points and podium finishes to hold the lead of the championship until the sixth round at the Red Bull Ring, when George Russell passed him in the standings. Norris retired from both races at the eleventh round at Sochi Autodrom, ruling him out of championship contention and dropping him to third place in the standings behind Alex Albon, although he recovered to second place after the final round at Yas Marina Circuit.[31]

Formula One

Norris testing for McLaren during free practice at the 2018 Japanese Grand Prix

In February 2017, Norris was signed as a junior driver with McLaren.[32] Following the announcement, Zak Brown said that Norris was "a fabulous prospect" who deserved the award.[33] Later that year, Norris tested for McLaren in a scheduled mid-season test. He set the second fastest lap in the second day of testing at the Hungaroring.[34] In late 2017, Norris became the official McLaren test and reserve driver for the 2018 season.[35] Norris participated in his first official practice session at the Belgian Grand Prix, recording 26 laps.[36] Norris drove in six further practice sessions during the year.

McLaren (2019–present)

2019
Norris at the 2019 Chinese Grand Prix

Norris was contracted to drive for McLaren for the 2019 Formula One World Championship, partnering Carlos Sainz Jr.[37] He qualified eighth on his debut at the Australian Grand Prix and finished the race in twelfth place. He scored his first Formula One points by finishing sixth at the following race, the Bahrain Grand Prix.[38] The Chinese Grand Prix was the first of Norris' retirements that season, after damage from a first lap collision with Daniil Kvyat caused him to retire later in the race.[39] Further retirements came at the Spanish Grand Prix after a collision with Lance Stroll and at the Canadian Grand Prix when a brake fire caused his suspension to fail.[40]

Norris was on course to finish seventh at the French Grand Prix but suffered hydraulic problems late in the race and was eventually classified ninth. This was followed by a sixth-place finish at the Austrian Grand Prix, matching his best result. He was forced to start from the back at the German Grand Prix due to penalties for exceeding the allowed number of engine components for the season. He later retired from the race after a power failure.[41] At the Belgian Grand Prix, he made his way from eleventh up to fifth in the early stages of the race. He maintained this position and was set to record his best career finish but suffered a power failure on his final lap and was classified eleventh.[42]

Three consecutive points finishes followed at the Italian, Singapore and Russian Grands Prix. At the Japanese Grand Prix, Norris was running in fifth place before Alex Albon collided with him during an overtake attempt. Norris dropped back after collecting floor damage and eventually finished eleventh. At the next race, the Mexican Grand Prix, he had a wheel fitted incorrectly after pitting from seventh place. He spent almost two minutes in the pits as his mechanics resolved the problem but he was eventually withdrawn from the race.[43] He ended the season with three consecutive points finishes.[44]

Norris finished his debut Formula One season eleventh in the drivers' championship with 49 points. Teammate Sainz scored 96 points, however Norris out-qualified Sainz at eleven of the twenty-one races. During his debut year, Norris signed a multi-year contract to stay with McLaren for the 2020 season until 2022.[45]

2020
Norris at the 2020 Tuscan Grand Prix

At the season-opening Austrian Grand Prix, Norris qualified in fourth place but was elevated to third after a grid penalty for Lewis Hamilton, the highest grid position of his career at the time and the highest for McLaren since the 2016 Austrian Grand Prix.[46] In the closing stages of the race, third-placed Hamilton was issued a five-second penalty for causing a collision with Alex Albon. Norris set the fastest lap of the race on the final lap to finish 4.802 seconds behind Hamilton, allowing Norris to claim the first podium finish of his career.[47][48] This made Norris the third youngest podium-finisher in Formula One history.[49] At the Styrian Grand Prix, Norris qualified sixth but was given a three-place grid penalty for overtaking under yellow flags during practice. He passed three cars in the final two laps of the race to finish fifth, in what he described as "one of the best races of [his] career".[50]

Six consecutive points finishes came between the British and Tuscan Grands Prix.[51] Norris collected damage on the opening lap of the Russian Grand Prix and finished the race fifteenth. At the Eifel Grand Prix, he retired from sixth place with power unit failure. During the Portuguese Grand Prix, a collision with Lance Stroll and a puncture resulted in a thirteenth-place finish.[52] Following this, Norris faced criticism over his remarks that Stroll "doesn't seem to learn"[53][54] and his perceived downplaying of Lewis Hamilton's achievement of most Grand Prix wins, describing it as meaning "nothing to him".[55][56] Subsequently, Norris apologised for his comments about Stroll and also offered a personal apology to Hamilton, stating that his comments were "careless" and that he "[hadn't] shown the respect I should have to certain people".[57][58][59]

At the wet Turkish Grand Prix Norris had what he called "[the] worst start of everyone's career ever".[60] He started from fourteenth place after a five-place grid penalty for failing to respect yellow flags in qualifying, but recovered to finish eighth and recorded the fastest lap of the race.[60] Norris finished fourth at the Bahrain Grand Prix and fifth at the season-finale Abu Dhabi Grand Prix,[61][62] which alongside the points scored by teammate Sainz, assisted McLaren in claiming third place in the constructors' championship over Racing Point.[63] Norris ended the season ninth in the drivers' championship with 97 points, eight points behind Sainz.

2021
Norris at the 2021 Austrian Grand Prix

Norris remained at McLaren for the 2021 season, partnering Daniel Ricciardo as Sainz left the team.[64]

Norris qualified seventh for the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix and finished the race fourth.[65][66][67] At the following race, the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, a qualifying time that would have placed him third on the grid was deleted for exceeding track limits, and he started the race seventh. Norris had run in second place before being passed by Lewis Hamilton with three laps remaining. He finished third to claim his second Formula One podium finish.[68] At the Monaco Grand Prix, Norris started fifth and benefited from Charles Leclerc's failure to start the race and Valtteri Bottas' retirement to claim another podium finish. Norris was issued a grid penalty and started ninth at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix for failing to enter the pits during a red flag period in qualifying, a sanction he criticised as "unfair".[69] He recovered places in the race to finish fifth, assisted by crashes and mistakes from drivers ahead.

Norris equalled his highest grid position at the time the Styrian Grand Prix, starting third after Bottas was issued with a grid penalty.[70] He finished fifth for the third consecutive race.[71] He bettered this qualifying position at the following weekend's Austrian Grand Prix, starting in second place after setting a time 0.048 seconds behind pole-sitter Max Verstappen.[72] Norris received a penalty during the race after being judged to have forced Sergio Pérez off the track. He finished the race third to claim his third podium of the season.[73] He set the sixth fastest time in Friday qualifying at the British Grand Prix, before finishing fifth in the new-format sprint qualifying and fourth in the Grand Prix. This result moved him up to third place in the drivers' championship.[74]

Norris qualified sixth for the Hungarian Grand Prix. He improved to third place by the first corner but was hit from behind by Bottas, causing him to collide with Verstappen. Norris retired from the race two laps later due to heavy damage. At the Italian Grand Prix, Norris finished fourth in sprint qualifying, which became third on the grid for the race as Bottas incurred an engine penalty. Norris finished the race second behind teammate Ricciardo, scoring his fourth podium of the season and securing McLaren's first one-two finish since the 2010 Canadian Grand Prix.[75] Norris took his first Formula One pole position in changing weather conditions in qualifying at the Russian Grand Prix. He lost the lead to Carlos Sainz on the first lap before regaining it on lap 13. Norris continued to lead the race with Lewis Hamilton close behind until rain began to fall in the closing laps. Norris decided to stay out on dry-weather tyres while Hamilton pitted for intermediate tyres. The rain soon worsened, allowing Hamilton to overtake and forcing Norris to pit for intermediates. Norris finished seventh, recording the fastest lap of the race. Following that race Norris was unable to finish any of the remaining seven races of the season in a higher position than seventh, although he was able to score points in each one of them. He finished his season in sixth place in the standings, having lost out to former teammate Sainz by just 4.5 points.

2022
Norris at the 2022 British Grand Prix

In February 2022 Norris signed a contract extension with McLaren that will see him be with team until at least 2025.[76] Norris completed all three days of the Bahrain Official Preseason Testing after Ricciardo tested positive for COVID-19 and was unable to attend.[77] At the new Miami Grand Prix, Norris brought out the safety car when his McLaren MCL36 collided with Pierre Gasly's AlphaTauri.[78]

In May 2022, despite suffering with tonsillitis, Norris came sixth in the Monaco Grand Prix and secured the fastest lap.[79]

2023

Norris is set to remain with McLaren for 2023 where he is set to be partnered at the team by 2021 Formula 2 champion Oscar Piastri who is replacing Daniel Ricciardo.[80]

Other ventures

Norris raised $12,000 for the COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund in support of the World Health Organization during an online streaming event on Twitch.[81] He also founded Team Quadrant, an esports team which also focuses on content creation and apparel, in 2020.[82][83]

Subsequent to his Formula One debut in 2019, Norris confirmed that he had struggled with his mental health from the pressures of the sport, turning to the Mind charity for support.[84] Alongside his support of the Mind charity, Norris himself is an advocate for increasing mental health visibility in sports.[85][86]

In September 2021, Norris launched a kart racing brand known as the LN Racing Kart. The manufacturing is supported by the OTK Kart Group, while operations are carried out by Ricky Flynn Motorsport.[87][88]

Awards

Karting record

Karting career summary

Season Series Team Position
2008 Super 1 National Championship — Comer Cadet 35th
2009 Formula Kart Stars MSA — Cadet 21st
Super 1 National Championship — Comer Cadet 14th
2010 Kartmasters British Grand Prix — Comer Cadet 27th
Formula Kart Stars MSA — Cadet 10th
Super 1 National Championship — Comer Cadet 3rd
2011 Trent Valley Kart Club — Minimax 27th
Kartmasters British Grand Prix — Comer Cadet 25th
Super 1 National Championship — Comer Cadet 5th
MSA British Championship — Cadet 6th
2012 Kartmasters British Grand Prix — Rotax Mini Max RL Racing Department 4th
Super 1 National Championship — Rotax Mini Max 2nd
Formula Kart Stars — Mini Max 1st
Formula Kart Stars — Junior Max 18th
Rotax Max Euro Challenge — Junior RL Racing 19th
WSK Final CupKF3 Ricky Flynn Motorsport 20th
Copa de Campeones — KF3 3rd
2013 South Garda Winter Cup — KF3 Ricky Flynn Motorsport 5th
Trofeo Andrea Margutti — KFJ 5th
WSK Euro SeriesKFJ 1st
WSK Super Master SeriesKFJ 2nd
CIK-FIA European ChampionshipKFJ 1st
CIK-FIA International Super Cup — KFJ 1st
Rotax Max Euro Challenge — Junior 7th
Italian CSAI ChampionshipKF3 13th
WSK Final CupKFJ 7th
Trofeo delle Industrie — KF3 5th
CIK-FIA World ChampionshipKFJ 4th
2014 South Garda Winter Cup — KF2 Ricky Flynn Motorsport 34th
WSK Champions CupKF 20th
WSK Super Master SeriesKF 12th
CIK-FIA European ChampionshipKF 3rd
CIK-FIA World ChampionshipKF 1st
Sources:[90][91]

Racing record

Racing career summary

Season Series Team Races Wins Poles F/Laps Podiums Points Position
2014 Ginetta Junior Championship HHC Motorsport 20 4 8 2 11 432 3rd
2015 MSA Formula Championship Carlin 30 8 10 9 15 413 1st
ADAC Formula 4 Championship Mücke Motorsport 8 1 0 3 6 131 8th
Italian Formula 4 Championship 9 0 0 3 1 51 11th
BRDC Formula 4 Autumn Trophy HHC Motorsport 4 2 1 1 4 128 5th
2016 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 Josef Kaufmann Racing 15 5 6 4 12 253 1st
Formula Renault 2.0 NEC 15 6 10 4 11 316 1st
Toyota Racing Series M2 Competition 15 6 8 5 11 924 1st
BRDC British Formula 3 Championship Carlin 11 4 4 3 8 247 8th
FIA Formula 3 European Championship 3 0 0 0 0 0 NC†
Macau Grand Prix 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 11th
2017 FIA Formula 3 European Championship Carlin 30 9 8 8 20 441 1st
Macau Grand Prix 1 0 0 0 1 N/A 2nd
FIA Formula 2 Championship Campos Racing 2 0 0 0 0 0 25th
2018 FIA Formula 2 Championship Carlin 24 1 1 1 9 219 2nd
WeatherTech SportsCar Championship United Autosports 1 0 0 0 0 18 58th
Formula One McLaren F1 Team Test-/Reserve driver
2019 Formula One McLaren F1 Team 21 0 0 0 0 49 11th
2020 Formula One McLaren F1 Team 17 0 0 2 1 97 9th
2021 Formula One McLaren F1 Team 22 0 1 1 4 160 6th
2022 Formula One McLaren F1 Team 50 1 0 3 11 122* 7th*

As Norris was a guest driver, he was ineligible for points
* Season still in progress.

Complete Ginetta Junior Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Team Car 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 DC Points
2014 HHC Motorsport Ginetta G40 BHI
1

6
BHI
2

10
DON
1

2
DON
2

2
THR
1

Ret
THR
2

10
OUL
1

DSQ
OUL
2

7
CRO
1

2
CRO
2

1
SNE
1

2
SNE
2

1
KNO
1

1
KNO
2

2
ROC
1

7
ROC
2

2
SIL
1

5
SIL
2

2
BHGP
1

9
BHGP
2

1
3rd 432

Complete Toyota Racing Series results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 DC Points
2016 M2 Competition RUA
1

3
RUA
2

1
RUA
3

9
TER
1

2
TER
2

2
TER
3

1
HMP
1

1
HMP
2

17
HMP
3

6
TAU
1

1
TAU
2

2
TAU
3

1
MAU
1

3
MAU
2

4
MAU
3

1
1st 924

Complete FIA Formula 3 European Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 DC Points
2016 Carlin Volkswagen LEC
1
LEC
2
LEC
3
HUN
1
HUN
2
HUN
3
PAU
1
PAU
2
PAU
3
RBR
1
RBR
2
RBR
3
NOR
1
NOR
2
NOR
3
ZAN
1
ZAN
2
ZAN
3
SPA
1
SPA
2
SPA
3
NÜR
1
NÜR
2
NÜR
3
IMO
1
IMO
2
IMO
3
HOC
1

Ret
HOC
2

16
HOC
3

16
NC‡ 0‡
2017 Carlin Volkswagen SIL
1

1
SIL
2

9
SIL
3

3
MNZ
1

1
MNZ
2

2
MNZ
3

2
PAU
1

2
PAU
2

2
PAU
3

Ret
HUN
1

8
HUN
2

14
HUN
3

3
NOR
1

11
NOR
2

1
NOR
3

3
SPA
1

1
SPA
2

Ret
SPA
3

1
ZAN
1

1
ZAN
2

3
ZAN
3

1
NÜR
1

1
NÜR
2

2
NÜR
3

1
RBR
1

4
RBR
2

2
RBR
3

17†
HOC
1

2
HOC
2

11
HOC
3

4
1st 441

Driver did not finish the race but was classified as he completed over 90% of the race distance.
As Norris was a guest driver, he was ineligible for points.

Complete Macau Grand Prix results

Year Team Car Qualifying Quali Race Main race
2016 United Kingdom Carlin Dallara F312 9th DNF 11th
2017 United Kingdom Carlin Dallara F317 2nd 7th 2nd

Complete FIA Formula 2 Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate points for the fastest lap of top ten finishers)

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Pos Points
2017 Campos Racing BHR
FEA
BHR
SPR
CAT
FEA
CAT
SPR
MON
FEA
MON
SPR
BAK
FEA
BAK
SPR
RBR
FEA
RBR
SPR
SIL
FEA
SIL
SPR
HUN
FEA
HUN
SPR
SPA
FEA
SPA
SPR
MNZ
FEA
MNZ
SPR
JER
FEA
JER
SPR
YMC
FEA

Ret
YMC
SPR

13
25th 0
2018 Carlin BHR
FEA

1
BHR
SPR

4
BAK
FEA

6
BAK
SPR

4
CAT
FEA

3
CAT
SPR

3
MON
FEA

6
MON
SPR

3
LEC
FEA

16
LEC
SPR

5
RBR
FEA

2
RBR
SPR

11
SIL
FEA

10
SIL
SPR

3
HUN
FEA

2
HUN
SPR

4
SPA
FEA

4
SPA
SPR

2
MNZ
FEA

6
MNZ
SPR

5
SOC
FEA

Ret
SOC
SPR

Ret
YMC
FEA

5
YMC
SPR

2
2nd 219

24 Hours of Daytona results

Year Team Co-drivers Car Class Laps Pos. Class
pos.
2018 United Kingdom United Autosports United Kingdom Philip Hanson
Spain Fernando Alonso
Ligier JS P217-Gibson P 718 38th 13th

Complete Formula One results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 WDC Points
2018 McLaren F1 Team McLaren MCL33 Renault R.E.18 1.6 V6 t AUS BHR CHN AZE ESP MON CAN FRA AUT GBR GER HUN BEL
TD
ITA
TD
SIN RUS
TD
JPN
TD
USA
TD
MEX
TD
BRA
TD
ABU
2019 McLaren F1 Team McLaren MCL34 Renault E-Tech 19
1.6 V6 t
AUS
12
BHR
6
CHN
18
AZE
8
ESP
Ret
MON
11
CAN
Ret
FRA
9
AUT
6
GBR
11
GER
Ret
HUN
9
BEL
11
ITA
10
SIN
7
RUS
8
JPN
11
MEX
Ret
USA
7
BRA
8
ABU
8
11th 49
2020 McLaren F1 Team McLaren MCL35 Renault E-Tech 20
1.6 V6 t
AUT
3
STY
5
HUN
13
GBR
5
70A
9
ESP
10
BEL
7
ITA
4
TUS
6
RUS
15
EIF
Ret
POR
13
EMI
8
TUR
8
BHR
4
SKH
10
ABU
5
9th 97
2021 McLaren F1 Team McLaren MCL35M Mercedes-AMG M12 E Performance
1.6 V6 t
BHR
4
EMI
3
POR
5
ESP
8
MON
3
AZE
5
FRA
5
STY
5
AUT
3
GBR
4
HUN
Ret
BEL
14
NED
10
ITA
2
RUS
7
TUR
7
USA
8
MXC
10
SAP
10
QAT
9
SAU
10
ABU
7
6th 160
2022 McLaren F1 Team McLaren MCL36 Mercedes F1 M13 E Performance
1.6 V6 t
BHR
15
SAU
7
AUS
5
EMI
35
MIA
Ret
ESP
8
MON
6
AZE
9
CAN
15
GBR
6
AUT
7
FRA
7
HUN
7
BEL
12
NED
7
ITA
7
SIN
4
JPN
10
USA
6
MXC
9
SAP
Ret7
ABU
6
7th* 122*

Did not finish, but was classified as he had completed more than 90% of the race distance.
* Season still in progress.

References

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External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Inaugural
MSA Formula Championship
Champion

2015
Succeeded by
Max Fewtrell
(F4 British Championship)
Preceded by Toyota Racing Series
Champion

2016
Succeeded by
Preceded by New Zealand Grand Prix
Winner

2016
Succeeded by
Preceded by Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0
Champion

2016
Succeeded by
Preceded by Formula Renault 2.0 NEC
Champion

2016
Succeeded by
Preceded by FIA Formula 3 European Championship
Champion

2017
Succeeded by
Preceded by FIA Formula 3 European Championship
Rookie Champion

2017
Succeeded by
Awards and achievements
Preceded by McLaren Autosport BRDC Award
2016
Succeeded by
Preceded by Autosport Awards
British Club Driver of the Year

2016
Succeeded by
Preceded by Autosport Awards
National Driver of the Year

2017
Succeeded by
Preceded by Autosport Awards
British Competition Driver of the Year

2019, 2020, 2021
Succeeded by
Incumbent