In a crossover that’s got the F1 paddock buzzing louder than a V6 hybrid at full throttle, Norwegian downhill skiing superstar Alexander Aamodt Kilde has waded into the 2025 Formula 1 title fray with a no-holds-barred prediction. The 28-year-old world champion, fresh off conquering the treacherous slopes of Kitzbühel and Beaver Creek this winter, didn’t mince words during a mid-season presser: “The best one deserves to win.” And in Kilde’s eyes, that “best one” is none other than McLaren’s Lando Norris.
Kilde, who boasts four World Cup downhill titles and a reputation for fearless speed on ice and snow, has become an unlikely F1 evangelist. A self-professed “grid junkie” who streams every Grand Prix from his recovery room post-crash (he’s nursed a broken leg and multiple concussions in his career), the Oslo native has forged an online bromance with Norris through mutual shoutouts on X. “Lando’s got that same edge I chase on the piste – pure, unfiltered talent mixed with ice-cold focus,” Kilde told reporters at a sponsor event in the Norwegian capital. “Max [Verstappen] is a legend, a four-time champ who’s clawed back from hell this year. But Lando? He’s the future. He’s earned it with every lap, every comeback. The best one deserves to win – and that’s him.”
The timing couldn’t be more electric. As the F1 circus gears up for the Qatar Grand Prix this weekend – the penultimate round of a season that’s redefined the sport – Norris clings to a slender 12-point lead over Verstappen (408-396), with teammate Oscar Piastri just six points adrift at 392. McLaren’s Constructors’ crown is already in the bag, but the Drivers’ battle is a powder keg. A Norris podium in Lusail’s night race could all but seal his maiden title, leaving Verstappen’s quest for a fifth straight crown hanging by a thread. Simulations from the FIA’s boffins put Norris’ championship odds at 68%, factoring in McLaren’s superior straight-line speed and Red Bull’s lingering aero gremlins.
Kilde’s endorsement isn’t just fanboy flair; it’s rooted in shared scars of high-stakes combat. Both men have stared down career-threatening injuries – Kilde’s 2023 Val Gardena pile-up left him with a shattered tibia, mirroring Norris’ own brush with fate in his 2020 Austrian shunt. “We message after races,” Kilde revealed with a grin. “He asks about handling fear at 300 km/h; I tell him it’s like bombing a 50-degree face. Same rush, same reward.” Norris, ever the cheeky Brit, fired back on X: “If Kilde’s betting on me, that’s basically a crystal ball from the gods of gravity. Time to repay the faith.
This isn’t Kilde’s first dip into motorsport prophecy. Last year, he nailed Ferrari’s Monza masterclass, tweeting “Red on red, poetry in motion” hours before Leclerc’s home heroics. But staking his rep on Norris? That’s next-level. “Alex is the real deal – guy’s got more podiums than most F1 teams this season,” Norris replied to a fan query. Verstappen, meanwhile, shrugged it off in Thursday’s media huddle: “Predictions are fun. Results? That’s my job. See you on track.”
For Kilde, the F1 obsession is therapeutic fuel. Balancing rehab from his latest tweak with World Cup prep, he’s logged over 200 hours of onboard footage this year alone. “Skiing’s my war; F1’s my escape,” he said. “And right now, that McLaren orange feels like destiny.” As Qatar’s floodlights flicker to life, Kilde’s words echo like a starting gun: In a sport – or a discipline – where the mountain (or the tarmac) always wins eventually, sometimes the boldest call is the right one.
Will Norris vindicate the ski slalom savant? Or will Verstappen ski straight over the doubters? Strap in – the descent begins Saturday.
