Lando Norris F1 title defence begins in Melbourne against a field that has spent the entire winter targeting McLaren’s specific weaknesses. That is the structural reality of defending any Formula 1 Championship — rival teams have a full year of race data, complete understanding of what the champion does well, and specific regulatory interpretations aimed at addressing those advantages. The turbo-hybrid era data confirms it: fewer than half of drivers who won a title successfully defended it the following season.

Why Defending Is Structurally Difficult

F1 driver in cockpit at speed during Formula 1 championship race

The champion team faces a resource allocation problem no other team has. They must simultaneously develop the existing car into its regulatory ceiling and begin work on the next concept. No team has unlimited engineers. The defending champion asks its workforce to do two things at once while rivals focus entirely on closing the gap. Add the 2026 regulatory change — which resets power unit development hierarchies — and McLaren is defending while adapting to a framework where previous advantages may be partially neutralised by competitors who invested earlier in the new architecture.

The genuine advantage Norris carries is the confidence architecture of a driver who has already won the hardest psychological battle in the sport. He knows what it takes. The team has proved it can build a race-winning car. That is not nothing. Check the drivers’ standings and follow race results as the picture develops through the opening rounds.

The McLaren Response to the New Era

McLaren’s pre-season preparation centred on understanding the 2026 regulations as quickly as possible rather than maximising final development of the outgoing concept. Whether that prioritisation was correct depends on how the new car performs in Melbourne. Follow the F1 calendar for the full championship schedule.