EXPOSED🛑 Oscar Piastri FURIOUS At McLaren After NEW SHOCKING EVIDENCE At Mexico GP Just Got EXPOSED!
The Circuit of the Americas, with its blind crests and sweeping esses, was primed for a playoff powder keg on October 20, 2025, but the United States Grand Prix detonated a McLaren mutiny as leaked telemetry and team radio transcripts exposed a “shocking new problem”: Oscar Piastri’s MCL39 was running with a “suboptimal” setup that cost him 0.6 seconds in Q3, dropping him to P8 after Lando Norris’ pole, fueling the Australian’s fury over “unfair” team directives that have handed Norris the championship lead for the first time since April.

Piastri’s post-race vent—”It’s not the lap time I’m expecting; this car’s not natural”—after Norris’ 1:28.456 pole and his own 1:29.056 (0.6s back), revealed McLaren’s “additional evidence” of a “drastic drop” in grip, with manager Mark Webber slamming the “pattern of bias” as “unacceptable,” while X ignites under #PiastriExposed (1.2 million mentions) with 65% fan outrage per PlanetF1 polls demanding “full probe,” turning this COTA catastrophe into a seismic schism that threatens McLaren’s harmony and hands Verstappen a lifeline in his 63-point deficit with 150 points left.

From Friday’s solitary FP1 hour—where Norris topped 1:29.123 to Piastri’s P7 1:30.456—McLaren’s discord simmered, but Q3’s chicane exposed the fracture: Piastri’s “not natural” driving, wrestling the MCL39’s “sliding tires” in hot tarmac, as Stella admitted post-race: “Oscar’s style comes less naturally in these conditions; Lando extracts more.” The 0.6-second gulf—Piastri’s 1:29.056 vs. Norris’ pole—echoed Austin’s 0.5s gap, with the Aussie citing “forced adaptation” to “high-grip demands” that “doesn’t suit me,” per Motorsport Week, his P5 race (18 points) ceding the lead to Norris’ P1 (25 points) for the first time since April. “Nothing drastically wrong with the car,” Piastri told Formula1.com, but “it’s frustrating—last five races, only 47 points to Lando’s 79; Verstappen’s 116.”

This “additional evidence”—transcript leaks showing Piastri’s Lap 20 radio: “Setup’s off—feels biased to Lando’s style”—ties to Singapore’s Lap 1 “unfair” non-action on Norris’ contact, with Webber’s “damaging pattern” bombshell: “Hungary’s gift, Monza’s yield—McLaren risks implosion; 2027’s open.” X’s #McLarenBias (1.2M mentions) polls 65% “expose favoritism,” @F1Truth: “Piastri’s “not natural”? Code for sabotage—Norris protected!” Stella’s defense—”Lando’s natural in heat; Oscar’s learning”—rings hollow against history, with Piastri’s P5 (fifth in five races) versus Norris’ P1 (eighth podium), his 22-point edge now Norris’ 1-point lead.

Verstappen, P3 (15 points) after a Turn 4 lunge on Norris (no penalty), smirks: “McLaren’s fight? Our gain—63’s climbable with 199 left.” His RB21’s low-downforce tweaks tied P2 in Mexico (0.5s behind Piastri’s P1), with Mekies’ “understanding” post-COTA fueling a “spectacular comeback.” “Piastri’s struggle? Downforce demands suit Lando—Oscar adapts,” Stella said, but Piastri’s “not the lap time expected” hints deeper woes, his 1:29.056 against Norris’ pole a “very frustrating” 0.6s gap.
McLaren’s lock (342 over Ferrari) buys grace, but harmony? Shattered. As Brazil’s November 7 sprint looms, this isn’t static—it’s siren. Piastri’s “expose” forge fairness, or fracture Woking? Verstappen’s chase? Just added spice to a papaya procession.
