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Lando Norris: McLaren driver says he faces 'repercussions' until end of F1 season after Oscar Piastri clash at Singapore GP

Lando Norris facing "repercussions" after McLaren held him accountable for first-lap collision with Oscar Piastri in Singapore; neither driver saying what consequences are; watch US GP Practice on Friday from 6.30pm and Sprint Qualifying at 10.30pm, live on Sky Sports F1

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McLaren pair Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri both stated there have been repercussions after they collided at the last race in Singapore, although neither were prepared to spell out exactly what that meant

​​​​​​Lando Norris revealed he will face "repercussions until the end of the season" for the first-lap contact with McLaren team-mate and title rival Oscar Piastri in the Singapore Grand Prix.

However, neither Norris and Piastri - who are separated by 22 points at the top of the Drivers' Championship with six races to go heading into this weekend's United States Grand Prix - nor McLaren team principal Andrea Stella have said what those consequences are.

​​​​​In an unexpected development two weeks on from the incident on the opening lap of the last race which saw the two McLarens bang wheels battling over third place, Norris said the team held him "accountable" for the incident after conducting their post-race review.

That marked a change from the day of the race when McLaren had initially felt that Norris had only banged into Piastri as a direct result of first tagging the back of Max Verstappen's Red Bull ahead of them.

But Norris revealed on Thursday: "Things were reviewed and there are and will be repercussions for me until the end of the season.

"It's not like I've got away with anything, but it was also an incident that was small and there was potential to try and avoid it.

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Ted Kravitz, David Croft and Karun Chandhok discuss whether McLaren are now interfering after Lando Norris revealed he will face 'repercussions' for the incident with team-mate and title rival Oscar Piastri in the Singapore

"I said after the race, I can't afford to make contact and have anything happen like what happened because I put just as much risk on my whole championship from something going wrong as I do on whoever I might be racing against.

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"Of course, repercussions for myself but otherwise the engagement and how we go racing is the same as it's always been."

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Piastri fumed on the radio after Norris got past while making contact during the Singapore GP

Piastri said his team-mate took "responsibility" for the clash in discussions with McLaren after the Singapore race weekend.

"The talks from Singapore were very productive with everyone involved," said Piastri, whose championship lead over Norris was trimmed to 22 points after his team-mate beat him to third in Singapore.

"The conclusion was what happened in Singapore is not how we want to go racing as a team and ultimately Lando has taken responsibility for that. So that's in the past now and the rules wont change because of that.

"Ultimately we have got that framework in place for a reason and there's no reason for that to change now. It has been dealt with."

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When asked what repercussions Norris had been referring to, Piastri replied: "I can't say what the repercussions are, it's for the team to know.

"Ultimately he has taken responsibility for it and there is a form of repercussion for that."

Stella explains change in McLaren stance

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McLaren Team Principal Andrea Stella explains the mcuh reported 'repercussions' following the collision between Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri.

Also speaking on Thursday in Austin, Stella explained the process that had led to Norris being made accountable for the incident, but refused to share details of the measures the Brit will face.

Stella said: "We reviewed the case, we identified that Lando was responsible for the contact because he was a little long in corner three, he touched Verstappen, and then he oversteered onto Oscar.

"Obviously, there was no malintent in this manoeuvre, but both drivers accepted the review, and we now head in to rest of season, like after Canada, even more united and stronger as a team."

What might Norris' consequences be?

Sky Sports F1’s David Croft:

“What could be the repercussions?

“Strategy? Does Oscar now get a preferred strategy? Is that one answer?

“It can’t be a fine, that’s not going to make any difference at all.”

Sky Sports F1’s Karun Chandhok:

“Honestly, I’m confused by all of it. Why say something like that if you’re not going to tell the full story?

“All you done is take a relatively quiet Thursday and exploded it.

"But I don’t think they’d do a sporting repercussion that will actually hamper Lando’s chances to score points."

Asked directly whether the "repercussions" would have any impact on racing between the pair going forward, Stella replied: "The repercussions or consequences, they are part of our framework. This is something both drivers were keen to have in the racing framework.

"So, for me, it was part of leading the review to discuss this with our drivers, they've been accepted, and we are now ready to focus on maximising the performance of the car and find again our winning ways."

Norris: Team 'fair' to hold me accountable for Singapore contact

It is the second time the McLaren pair have made contact this season after Norris ran into the back of Piastri during the closing stages of the Canadian Grand Prix.

Norris immediately took the blame for that collision but did not in Singapore until talks took place following the race, where he finished third behind George Russell and Verstappen, but ahead of Piastri.

The Briton admitted "sometimes the repercussions are not positive" when put to him that McLaren generally come out of difficult situations in a positive manner.

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Red Bull's Max Verstappen refused to be drawn on whether McLaren are favouring Norris over Piastri and insists he's focused on what he can do to bring himself back into title contention

He added: "[The ramifications] have got nothing to do with you guys. There were talks, that was inevitable.

"The team held me accountable for what happened, which I think is fair, then we made progress from there on understanding what the repercussions were for myself to avoid anything worse happening than then what did."

Both drivers say they will continue to race hard until the end of the season but incidents such as Singapore need to be avoided.

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Watch from Norris and Piastri's 360-degree onboard camera as Norris crashed into his McLaren team-mate during the Canada Grand Prix

"The last thing I want is for something like that to happen, to cause this kind of controversial talks after the race," Norris continued.

"At the same time, I put just as much risk on me putting myself out of the race as I do whoever I'm racing against, whether it's Oscar or anyone else.

"It's clearly something I want to avoid. It's been one of my strengths since coming into Formula 1, avoiding contact in general and keeping myself in the race and those kind of things.

"One thing we've always done good as a team is using and progressing with the framework that we have to allow both of us as drivers to trust each other and the team. That's a lot of the reason for why we're a stronger team than everyone else."

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Norris poked fun at Max Verstappen, joking he'd tried to 'puncture' the Red Bull driver's tyre in their battle for second

Piastri not expecting redresses on track

McLaren rejected Piastri's radio request for action to be taken against his team-mate during the race and the stewards did not intervene either.

The Australian fumed on the radio and said that McLaren's decision was "not fair".

Just like his post-race Singapore interviews, he remained level-headed about the situation during media day ahead of this weekend's United States Grand Prix, stating it's "very tough" to judge whether swapping positions is the right thing to do.

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"I'm not expecting things to be redressed on track any time or every time. Ultimately, we know how we're expected to go racing, and if we don't that, there's consequences for that," said Piastri.

"I'm not going to change anything in how I go racing. I don't think what happened was purposeful. I think it was just a slight misjudgement. Ultimately, I'm not going to change how I go racing because of that."

Put to him that with only six races of the season to go would be it not natural for both himself and Norris to become more 'selfish' as they each attempt to win their first world title, Piastri said: "As drivers there an element of selfishness but it's clear for us if we take that too far or if we do something that's not within the interests of the team - and ultimately what happened in Singapore wasn't in the interests of anyone, no one was meaning for that to happen - there are consequences for that.

"You can be selfish, but you need to expect that that's not always going to work for you."

Sky Sports F1's live United States GP schedule

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Look back at some of the most dramatic moments to have taken place at the United States Grand Prix

Friday October 17
6pm: United States GP Practice One (practice starts at 6.30pm)*
8.30pm: Team Principals' Press Conference
10pm: United States GP Sprint Qualifying (qualifying starts at 10.30pm*)

Saturday October 18
5pm: United States GP Sprint build-up
6pm: UNITED STATES GP SPRINT
7pm: Ted's Sprint Notebook
9pm: United States GP Qualifying build-up*
10pm: UNITED STATES GP QUALIFYING*
12am (Sunday morning): Ted's Qualifying Notebook*

Sunday October 19
6.30pm: Grand Prix Sunday: United States GP build-up*
8pm: THE UNITED STATES GRAND PRIX*
10pm: Chequered Flag: United States GP reaction
11pm: Ted's Notebook

*also live on Sky Sports Main Event

Formula 1 are in North America for the United States Grand Prix in Austin this weekend, live on Sky Sports F1. Stream Sky Sports with NOW - no contract, cancel anytime