
The Mind Behind McLaren's 1000th Race Celebration
McLaren Racing celebrated 1,000 Formula 1 starts at the Monaco Grand Prix, just like Miles Davis—relying on raw instinct and rhythm. When the calendar shifted, it was Zak Brown and CMO Louise McEwen who improvised, turning a logistical headache into a historic homecoming. The team pivoted its milestone celebration from Miami to Monaco, reconnecting the papaya squad to the very streets where Bruce McLaren debuted in 1966.
Why it matters
- McLaren joins Ferrari as one of only two teams to reach 1,000 grands prix, a mark of institutional longevity rare in modern F1.
- The milestone lands amid a genuine title defense, with Lando Norris carrying the drivers' crown and Oscar Piastri bolstering the constructors' charge.
- McEwen's focus on fans underscores that modern F1 success depends on cultural resonance as much as engineering.
The details
- The anniversary was originally slated for Miami's Regatta Harbour. When Bahrain and Saudi Arabia were cancelled in mid-March, McLaren pivoted within weeks, using Miami to launch the campaign and Monaco to host the milestone.
- Monaco marks exactly where the story began: Bruce McLaren raced the M2B here in 1966. The car returned for its first run in over 15 years.
- Mika Häkkinen drove the M2B on the circuit alongside the current MCL40, while past and present winners gathered for a commemorative photo.
- McEwen described the shift from Miami's accessible spectacle to Monaco's intimate tone as unexpected but "more meaningful," reflecting F1's inherent unpredictability.
What's next
The 1,000th race was never meant as a nostalgia exercise. With the M2B back in the paddock and the MCL40 leading the charge, McLaren's "Forever Forward" ethos suggests the team views even its deepest heritage as fuel for the next chapter rather than a monument to the past.
Original Article :https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/the-mind-behind-mclarens-1000th-race-celebrat...





