Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Recommended for you

Live: MotoGP Italian Grand Prix as it happens

MotoGP
Italian GP
Live: MotoGP Italian Grand Prix as it happens

Why Rally Japan win was "important" for Elfyn Evans in WRC title fight

WRC
Rally Japan
Why Rally Japan win was "important" for Elfyn Evans in WRC title fight

The reclined seating position that caused Fernando Alonso's Canadian GP retirement

Formula 1
Canadian GP
The reclined seating position that caused Fernando Alonso's Canadian GP retirement

Abbi Pulling earns widespread praise after historic GB3 race win

F1 Academy
Montreal
Abbi Pulling earns widespread praise after historic GB3 race win

Great Debate: What should the next F1 ruleset look like?

Feature
Formula 1
Feature
Great Debate: What should the next F1 ruleset look like?

How Aston Martin is navigating its issues, as Honda plots ADUO updates

Feature
Formula 1
Feature
Canadian GP
How Aston Martin is navigating its issues, as Honda plots ADUO updates

The amusing story of how a scientist F1 fan named a wasp after Oscar Piastri

Formula 1
Canadian GP
The amusing story of how a scientist F1 fan named a wasp after Oscar Piastri

WRC Japan: Elfyn Evans claims second win of 2026 to increase championship lead

WRC
Rally Japan
WRC Japan: Elfyn Evans claims second win of 2026 to increase championship lead

This is the best generation of F1 drivers in history, McLaren team boss claims

Are F1 drivers more competitive than ever? Andrea Stella certainly thinks so

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Bryn Lennon - Formula 1

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella believes Formula 1’s current driver crop is better than ever, as his drivers Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri battle for the world title.

No fewer than 10 current drivers – half the field – are grand prix winners, with 10 polesitters and a whopping 15 podium finishers. That’s everyone but Yuki Tsunoda and rookies Oliver Bearman, Liam Lawson, Gabriel Bortoleto and Franco Colapinto.

Last weekend’s Brazil Grand Prix was another sign of how competitive F1 has become, with all 10 cars (representing seven different teams) within 0.528s in Q3 on an admittedly short Interlagos track. An almost identical gap separated the top 14 drivers in Q1 and in Q2.

“I think what we see in this season in Formula 1, in terms of competitiveness – and this is something that you may pick for a little bit of analysis – I don't recall that there was such a competitive pool of drivers in any other season,” Stella said.

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Bryn Lennon / Formula 1 / Getty Images

The battle for the title mainly involves the McLaren drivers, with European F3 champion and F2 runner-up Norris facing back-to-back Formula Renault Eurocup, F3 and F2 champion Piastri.

However, Stella believes seven or eight drivers are talented enough to win the world championship – which, according to him, is testament to the quality of F1’s feeder series.

“The new generation of drivers, they're just so good, and now you have seven, eight drivers which are at world championship level. Like I say, I'm not sure this has happened before,” the Italian added.

“Potentially this is because of how good the junior categories now are. These guys, they go karting and they have the data. They train at a certain level when they are adolescents. This has made the competitive field extremely, extremely tight, and therefore the difference is in this last one percent.”

Read Also:
Previous article What we learned from Audi's big F1 2026 reveal
Next article Why Martin Brundle ranks Max Verstappen’s Brazil F1 charge as a "drive for the ages"

Top Comments

Latest news