After the race, team principal Andrea Stella didn’t run from the outcome. He made it clear that the choice should be judged based on the information available at the moment the decision had to be made — roughly five to seven minutes before the start, when the tyres had to be fitted . In that small window, the track still looked greasy, it was still raining lightly, and the team worried about maintaining temperature in slick tyres on a damp surface
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“So in hindsight, we were penalised by the decision,” Stella said, “but at the time that the decision needed to be made, I think the conditions existed to fit an intermediate tyre. It just changed very rapidly” .
He added that the choice was not made by one person alone. It was a shared judgment among engineers, strategists, and both drivers, and that he had even given his own input to ensure the team was aligned .
Lando Norris didn’t need to wait for the end of the race to give his verdict. On the warm-up lap, he already had his doubts. “I think the rain already stopped a little bit by then, so, yeah, it was the wrong decision in hindsight,” he later said . Norris acknowledged that the intermediates helped him out of the gate — he held the lead briefly after the start — but he also knew the team had rolled the dice and lost. “It was good for a lap and kept me out of trouble,” he added, “but it was the wrong decision in the end”
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His race would end prematurely anyway. A gearbox problem forced Norris into retirement, turning a disastrous strategy day into a clean zero in the classified results .
Oscar Piastri’s race didn’t end in the garage, but it was no less punishing. With his early stop for slicks dropping him toward the back of the field, he was forced to fight through traffic to try to recover any position. In that charge, he collided with Alex Albon. The stewards reviewed the incident and handed Piastri a 10-second time penalty .
Andrea Stella didn’t protest. He described it as a “misjudgment” from Piastri, a direct consequence of the pressure to recover track position after the tyre gamble had already ruined his race .
It was Piastri, however, who delivered the line that most plainly summed up the afternoon. “Unfortunately for us, it stopped raining as the formation lap started, basically,” he said. “Just one of those things where had it rained a little bit more, we would have looked like heroes. But it didn’t, so we looked like idiots” . He had already said over team radio during the race that McLaren had “made a mistake”
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When the chequered flag fell, Norris was a DNF with a mechanical problem. Piastri crossed the line 11th, two laps down . McLaren, a team that had started the day holding the second row and eyeing at least one podium, left Montreal entirely empty-handed.
For all the post-race reflection, the margin between a strategic masterstroke and a headline-making failure was the rain that didn't fall. As Stella stressed, the decision was made with incomplete information in a rapidly changing window. But the result — zero points from a position of strength — is what ultimately landed on the team’s scorecard.
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