“LANDO, MAX WILL DEFINITELY WIN THIS YEAR, YOU ONLY WON ONE YEAR THANKS TO YOUR FATHER’S HELP.” — Bernie Ecclestone Shocks F1 World by Dismissing Lando Norris as a “Real Rival” to Max Verstappen, Claims 2025 Title Was “Thanks to Your Father’s Help” – Norris Fires Back in Scorching Response That Has Fans Buzzing Worldwide

Formula 1 has been set ablaze once again – this time by the sport’s most outspoken former ringmaster.
Bernie Ecclestone, the 95-year-old ex-F1 supremo who ruled the sport with an iron fist for four decades, has unleashed a brutal, no-filter takedown of 2025 World Champion Lando Norris, declaring the McLaren driver “will never be a real rival” to four-time champion Max Verstappen and shockingly claiming Norris’s maiden title was only possible “thanks to your father’s help.”
In a rare but characteristically explosive interview with the British tabloid The Sun published this morning, Ecclestone did not hold back:
“Lando, Max will definitely win this year. You only won one year thanks to your father’s help. Let’s be honest – without Adam Norris’s money and connections, you’d still be fighting for podiums, not championships. Max does it on pure talent. You had the best car and daddy’s chequebook. That’s not rivalry – that’s convenience.”

The comments – dripping with Ecclestone’s trademark bluntness – have sent shockwaves through the F1 paddock, fan communities and social media. Verstappen’s 2025 campaign was plagued by Red Bull internal turmoil, the departure of Adrian Newey, and a mid-season dip in performance, allowing McLaren to dominate the second half of the season and secure both the drivers’ and constructors’ titles. Norris clinched his first championship in a dramatic finale in Abu Dhabi.
Within hours of the article going live, Norris hit back hard in a strongly worded statement released through McLaren and posted on his personal social channels:
“Bernie’s entitled to his opinion, but let’s get the facts straight. I won the 2025 championship because I drove better, the team executed better, and we earned every point on track – not because of anyone’s wallet. My father has supported my dream since I was a kid, like millions of parents do. To reduce my title to ‘daddy’s help’ is disrespectful to every engineer, mechanic, strategist and teammate who poured their heart into this. Max is an incredible driver – one of the best ever – but I beat him fair and square in 2025.
If Bernie wants to talk money, he should look at his own era when he controlled the purse strings. I’ll let my results do the talking in 2026.”

The response has electrified fans worldwide. #NorrisVsEcclestone and #BernieOutOfTouch exploded across social platforms, with supporters rallying behind Norris:
“Lando just shut Bernie down. Daddy’s money? The man won on merit – full stop.” “Ecclestone’s jealous because modern F1 isn’t his playground anymore. Lando earned it.” “Max is the benchmark, but Norris proved he belongs. Bernie’s take is embarrassing.”
Verstappen has not yet commented publicly, but sources close to Red Bull say the Dutch driver “found it amusing” and is focused on reclaiming the title in 2026 under the radical new regulations.
McLaren team principal Andrea Stella backed his driver immediately: “Lando’s championship was earned through talent, teamwork and execution. We welcome competition and respect all opinions – but facts matter more than nostalgia.”
The row has reignited long-standing debates about privilege in motorsport, the role of family wealth in junior careers, and whether Ecclestone – now long retired – still carries the authority he once did. Many fans see Norris’s rebuttal as a generational changing of the guard: the old guard versus the new.
With pre-season testing in Bahrain just weeks away and the 2026 rules promising a true reset, the sport is already buzzing with anticipation. Ecclestone’s provocation has lit the fuse – and Lando Norris has just thrown petrol on it.
The 2026 season hasn’t even started, but the war of words already feels like a championship fight.
And Max Verstappen – as always – is quietly watching, ready to settle it on track.