Dominant constructors’ title ‘beyond our wildest dreams’ – Horner

Red Bull’s sixth constructors’ championship coming in such dominant fashion with victory at the Japanese Grand Prix is something the team couldn’t even dream of, according to team principal Christian Horner. Max Verstappen led from pole position to …

Red Bull’s sixth constructors’ championship coming in such dominant fashion with victory at the Japanese Grand Prix is something the team couldn’t even dream of, according to team principal Christian Horner.

Max Verstappen led from pole position to take Red Bull’s 15th win in 16 races and secure back-to-back constructors’ titles with six rounds still to run. It’s the earliest a championship has ever been won, and Horner says the way Red Bull has kept up its form from late last year is unexpected.

“Coming into the season I don’t think we could have dreamed of having a season like this,” Horner said. “It’s unbelievable.

“Last year was a very strong year for us, but to have kept that momentum rolling with the challenges we have had is testimony to all the men and women of the team that have worked tirelessly to produce a car as competitive as we have had, and that Max has made such good use of.”

Although only the constructors’ title was mathematically sealed at Suzuka, Verstappen also moved within touching distance of the drivers’ title and Horner says there is no better driver on the grid at present.

“Max is absolutely at the top of the game — he is the best driver in F1 at this point in time,” he said. “Everything has to come together car, driver, team in total harmony. He has this inner hunger and determination and huge ability, but he channels it and he does not get distracted by some of the trappings of F1. He is an out and out racer.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

For his part, Verstappen says it’s the best team season he’s been involved in at Red Bull, having won the double last year too.

“It’s better, for sure,” Verstappen said. “The car has been more dominant this year, apart from Singapore. But all the other races we’ve had a really, really good car. It’s just an incredible season for everyone involved within the team.

“[I’m] very proud to be working with all these amazing people here at the track, but also especially back at the factory as well. These people you might not see at the track, they’re doing a lot of hard work to make sure that our car is always in the best shape, gets developed throughout the year, and be best prepared for the year after.”

Verstappen finds Red Bull back the way he likes it

Max Verstappen says the Red Bull is an enjoyable car to drive again after finishing Friday practice in top spot at the Japanese Grand Prix. Red Bull struggled in Singapore, where not only did its win streak end but Verstappen was only able to finish …

Max Verstappen says the Red Bull is an enjoyable car to drive again after finishing Friday practice in top spot at the Japanese Grand Prix.

Red Bull struggled in Singapore, where not only did its win streak end but Verstappen was only able to finish fifth behind both Ferraris, Lando Norris and Lewis Hamilton. The team insisted it was a track-specific issue, and Verstappen backed that up at Suzuka by lapping 0.6s clear of the field in FP1 and over 0.3s ahead of Charles Leclerc in FP2.

“It felt really good today,” Verstappen said. “From lap one, the car was enjoyable to drive again. It seems like we had a strong day on short runs, long runs. There’s a lot of degradation on this track, so it will be quite tough I think on tires in the race. But so far, I think we have a good start to the weekend.

“It looks like it’s all a bit tight behind me — Ferrari, McLaren are close. We’ll have a look. But I think at the end of the day, we just focus on ourselves and try to optimize our performance, and if we do that, I’m confident that we’ll fight for pole here.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

Teammate Sergio Perez was a second off the pace down in ninth place, but says experiments that Red Bull was doing with its setup in FP1 clouded his final position.

“Very interesting,” Perez said. “I think this morning, we were a bit off balance on our side, and I think we had some very good understanding of the direction we need to take. Certainly things are looking a lot better than they did last weekend, which is positive. I look forward to (trying to) qualify well tomorrow, because degradation seems to be quite high around this place, especially with the temperatures we’re expecting.

“I do believe that we’re going to be strong tomorrow, and also on Sunday.”

While Ferrari was second fastest in each session, Norris was third and says the performance was encouraging for McLaren even if the car’s handling wasn’t.

“The pace has been pretty good today, probably one of the closest times we’ve been to Red Bull and the front lot on a Friday,” Norris said. “So encouraging from a pace point of view, but the car feels a bit all over the place.

“But I kind of think it does for the majority — it’s very low grip. I don’t think it’s us in particular; it’s just a handful. So I think for us if we can just try and calm it down a bit, bring the balance together, I think we can have a good day tomorrow.

“I doubt it’s going to be pole — the Red Bull’s just doing the normal Red Bull — but I think we’re not far away. I would say we normally get a bit closer come lower fuel, turn the engines up, things like that. I think challenging for pole is quite a big task and probably a bit too far, but to try and challenge Mercedes — who maybe didn’t look quite so good today — challenge the Ferraris and Astons who looked pretty good, I think that’s going to be our battle for tomorrow.”

Technical directive not behind Red Bull’s Singapore slump – Horner

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner insists a technical directive was not the cause of the difficulties faced in the Singapore Grand Prix, as the team’s run of winning every race this season came to an end. Max Verstappen qualified 11th and …

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner insists a technical directive was not the cause of the difficulties faced in the Singapore Grand Prix, as the team’s run of winning every race this season came to an end.

Max Verstappen qualified 11th and Sergio Perez 13th as Red Bull struggled heavily on Saturday, leaving it out of contention on a track that is tough to overtake on. The challenging weekend coincided with a technical directive from the FIA that targeted flexible bodywork – specifically front and rear wings – coming into force, but Horner says that’s no the explanation for Red Bull’s run of wins ending.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

“It’s all engineering stuff,” Horner said. “There’s no silver bullets in this business. I know all of you would love to blame the TD, but unfortunately we can’t even blame that because it has not changed a single component on our car. So I think circuit characteristics are different here and we haven’t optimized the car in the right window to extract the most.”

Elaborating on how Red Bull viewed its weekend, Horner said the race pace was actually far more competitive than the qualifying speed, but strategic gambles didn’t pay off.

“I think, firstly, we understood a lot more in the race and the pace of the car came much more back to what we expected. We knew coming here we expected to have closer competition but it took us a bit by surprise how just how far out we were on Friday.

“We were just not in the right operating window for the car, particularly over a single lap. When you are not there, the tires feel horrible, everything just doesn’t work. So I think we got a very good steer in the race, we saw, particularly in the latter stint, that Max’s pace was very strong.

“Unfortunately, in the race, by starting on the hard, we took a strategic gamble and the best way of that race paying us off was if we had an early safety car or if you get a safety car later on into the race. But the lap that the safety car came out on was strategically the worst possible lap for the strategy that we were on, because it gave the lead cars — the cars ahead of us — a free stop, at the same time giving us track position but making us take the restart with tires that were very hard to heat up again having done well over 20 laps. So then Max was picked off by the guys that had the free stop and then we had to take a pit stop that was in normal racing conditions, which then dropped you another 23 seconds behind.

“With that all considered, the recovery that we had, and the pace that we had – particularly in the latter stages of the race — to be 0.2s behind Charles (Leclerc) at the finish line, was a strong race.

“At some point we were going to get beaten. Fifteen in a row is an unbelievable record and we have only been beaten once prior to (Singapore) since last July.

“I have to congratulate Ferrari, particularly Carlos, who drove a very strong race and deserved to win. At the same time, we have narrowed in on both championships, which we have a chance of winning the constructors’ championship in Japan next weekend.”

Marko warned by FIA over Perez comments

The FIA has warned Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko over comments he made regarding the team’s Mexican driver Sergio Perez. Speaking about Perez’s “fluctuations in form” at Monza, Marko had added: “he is South American and he is just not as completely …

The FIA has warned Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko over comments he made regarding the team’s Mexican driver Sergio Perez.

Speaking about Perez’s “fluctuations in form” at Monza, Marko had added: “he is South American and he is just not as completely focused in his head as Max (Verstappen) is or as Sebastian (Vettel)”.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

It’s not the first time Marko has referred to the Mexican as South American, but he also further compounded the issue with later similar comments, leading to a statement of apology towards Perez that the driver said he had accepted earlier this week.

Now, the FIA has confirmed that an official written warning was sent to Marko, reminding him of his responsibilities as a public figure in motorsport, citing the governing body’s Code of Ethics.

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner had previously told Sky Sports why the team itself had been reluctant to make a statement on Marko’s comments.

“I know he regrets what he said,” Horner said. “He has apologized. Even at 80 years of age, it is not too late to learn.

“Helmut is not an employee of Red Bull Racing. That’s why didn’t we put out a statement. He is part of the wider Red Bull Group and they put that apology out through their Servus TV channel.”

Alongside Horner, Marko is listed as a director of Red Bull Racing on the United Kingdom’s Companies House website.

Scuderia AlphaTauri to bring upgrades to Singapore Grand Prix

The major upgrade will look to bring AlphaTauri’s car closer to that of its sister team in Red Bull.

[autotag]Scuderia AlphaTauri[/autotag] has struggled greatly to get results during the 2023 Formula 1 season, but the team may not have to wait long to see some better results this season.

Team CEO Peter Bayer spoke to PlanetF1 recently, and he told the publication that the team has a major upgrade coming for the Singapore Grand Prix. On top of that, he also confirmed that the upgrade looks to bring the team’s car in line with their sister team, Red Bull Racing, who is currently dominating the constructors championship behind Max Verstappen.

Here is what Bayer said about AlphaTauri’s incoming upgrades:

“I mean, this year, we’ve seen some amazing changes in the results scheme, when suddenly Aston Martin popped up, and then suddenly McLaren popped up, but I think that’s really down to the fact that they all understood that what Red Bull Racing did in terms of design philosophy is the right one with this new downforce element which everybody is following. We actually have a big upgrade coming for Singapore, which will follow the same philosophy so everybody’s closing in on that and then I think next year will be extremely close.”

Singapore’s street circuit is notoriously difficult to drive, so it should serve as a big test for AlphaTauri’s young drivers. Yuki Tsunoda will drive alongside replacement driver Liam Lawson, who is filling in for an injured Daniel Ricciardo. Both drivers have done well given the paltry state of the car, so if the upgrade Bayer has promised comes through, points may be possible in Singapore.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

Red Bull technical director says RB19 car an ‘average good’ car

Red Bull technical director Pierre Wache says that he’s more surprised that other teams don’t have a car as good as Red Bull’s.

To say the RB19 from Red Bull Racing is dominant would be an understatement. The car has yet to not place first in any race over the 2023 season, but according to the team itself, Red Bull doesn’t seem to think it created a masterpiece.

Red Bull technical director Pierre Wache spoke to Motorsport.com, and he said that the car’s strength comes from doing everything good and not one thing great. Here’s what he had to say about the car:

“It’s not very good in one aspect. Why we think it is good because we are quicker than others, but fundamentally I would say we didn’t do a fantastic job. We did a good job. I was more surprised by others, who didn’t do as good a job I would say. That is why our expectations were different from the beginning of the year. I don’t want to be modest or whatever, but when you see some teams are able in three races to gain one second per lap, it means if you put the stuff together, it will be decent. It doesn’t require two years of development.”

His last point holds weight — one would generally look to McLaren’s recent success. McLaren went from placing in the bottom five in its first two races in 2023 to regular podium places in the last few, all after an upgrade package in Austria. While other teams may not catch Red Bull, it’s reasonable to think that some other teams may get faster after bringing upgrades after the summer break.

The F1 season continues with the Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort on Aug. 27.

Red Bull has outside interest for 2025 seat according to Christian Horner

Could Red Bull make a splash in the drivers market outside of its stable?

Much has been made about drivers like Yuki Tsunoda and Daniel Ricciardo potentially replacing Red Bull’s Sergio Perez sooner than later. But according to Red Bull team principal [autotag]Christian Horner[/autotag], there may be some other drivers in play.

Horner spoke to Sky Sports News on Tuesday and revealed that the team has received some outside interest for their second seat in 2025. He expressed happiness at the idea that the team’s success has the ability to draw such allure for other drivers on the grid.

“It’s just the position that we’re in it’s great to have a lot of interest,” Horner told Sky Sports. “And it’s not just from those drivers [Perez and Ricciardo] – it’s from drivers outside our spectrum as well regarding 2025.”

Just who that could be is only speculation, but there are a few notable options. The team has reached out to driver Lando Norris in the past, so a potential link there wouldn’t be entirely unprecedented. There are also plenty of former Red Bull drivers currently outside the spectrum that could possibly return, such as Alex Albon or Carlos Sainz.

In reality, though, players like Ricciardo, Tsunoda and current Super Formula driver Liam Lawson are far more likely to get first looks — should Perez even get replaced, that is.

[lawrence-auto-related count=5 category=10]

Making sense of Red Bull’s turbulent driver strategy

Red Bull’s Formula 1 driver strategy is a bizarre blend of glorious success and chaotic failure. It has consistently employed one of the best drivers in grand prix racing as the spearhead of Red Bull Racing – first Sebastian Vettel, then Daniel …

Red Bull’s Formula 1 driver strategy is a bizarre blend of glorious success and chaotic failure. It has consistently employed one of the best drivers in grand prix racing as the spearhead of Red Bull Racing –  first Sebastian Vettel, then Daniel Ricciardo, then Max Verstappen – so judged by that, it has been a roaring success. But the second seat has proved more troublesome in recent years, while at AlphaTauri/Toro Rosso there have been times when chaos has reigned.

Daniel Ricciardo’s return to AlphaTauri, a team he raced for in its Toro Rosso guise in 2012-13, is the latest chapter in the strange story of Red Bull’s junior team. It’s a microcosm of the troubles of the Red Bull driver program, one that was triggered by Pierre Gasly being allowed to move to Alpine and Colton Herta’s superlicence troubles. The former was an unforeseeable event given it was part of the fallout from Fernando Alonso’s seismic decision to join Aston Martin, closely followed by the realization that Alpine had failed to sign its junior prospect, Oscar Piastri, to a proper contract. But while letting Gasly go a year early was the right decision given the opportunity he had and the payback Red Bull received, what happened next was illogical.

With a scheme of Red Bull’s size, there should have been a next-cab-off-the-rank to slot in. Instead, Helmut Marko recruited Nyck de Vries (main image), seemingly largely off the back of a single extraordinary performance for Williams at Monza in 2022. Revisionist history has it that this drive was nothing special, but in the circumstances it was. However, Marko over-extrapolated and moved to sign de Vries, seemingly disregarding what had been learned about his strengths and weaknesses during his years in single-seaters.

This has been Marko’s approach to talent-spotting and generally it has worked well. But it has become anachronistic at a time when the majority of F1 teams now have some kind of junior program. Such drivers are now recruited younger, increasingly from the karting ranks rather than from entry-level single-seaters, and the monitoring of prospects is becoming increasingly rigorous and scientific. That perhaps explains why Red Bull’s junior scheme has had so many good drivers recently, but has missed out on the truly great prospects in such a competitive market. You can’t just judge a driver based on their good days.

Of the drivers who have emerged as superstars in recent years, only Max Verstappen has come through with Red Bull support. And even then, he was only picked up after winning a bidding war with rivals Mercedes and Ferrari when Verstappen was already in F3. That showed the value of its second team as Red Bull could offer Verstappen a graduation to F1 in 2015, something its rivals couldn’t afford to risk with only one team.

But Charles Leclerc (Ferrari), George Russell (Mercedes), Esteban Ocon (Mercedes) and Piastri (Alpine/McLaren) have since made a big impact with support outside of Red Bull. Even Alex Albon, who got his F1 shot through Red Bull, was dropped and has done his best work after being salvaged from the scrapheap by Williams. The evidence indicates that Red Bull is missing out.

The decision to get rid of De Vries is an odd one. His performance level hasn’t been good enough to ensure he was undroppable, but it certainly hasn’t been bad enough to make it necessary to oust him. The real mistake was the decision to sign him in the first place, as the willingness to dispense with him shows it wasn’t based on any real confidence in his ability, but just a knee-jerk reaction to the need for a driver and what happened at Monza. It is just one more baffling move in a puzzling junior driver scheme.

Ricciardo was thrown a career lifeline at the expense of De Vries. Mark Thompson/Getty Images/Red Bull Content Pool

Which brings us to Ricciardo. You can argue that this switch is more driven by the need to get Ricciardo into an F1 car to evaluate, with De Vries as collateral damage. You can also add to that the commercial value of one of F1’s biggest names whose return has added spice to the season. Were Bernie Ecclestone still involved, persuading Red Bull to get Ricciardo back on the grid is exactly the kind of thing he’d have done.

The 33-year-old is an unusual choice for an operation that was, initially at least, focused on developing the best of Red Bull’s young drivers. For all the rhetoric in recent years of it becoming more of a ‘sister’ team, it has always been and will always be the poor relation, and being an incubator for future Red Bull drivers remains part of the brief. But given Max Verstappen is signed up to the end of 2028, there is the possibility Ricciardo could have a value as his number two. Ironically, this was a role Ricciardo wasn’t keen on and which played a part in his decision to turn down a new deal and move to Renault in 2019.

So Ricciardo is a special case, and one who perhaps does justify being thrown in mid-season. Yes, it’s unfortunate for De Vries but he always seemed destined to be only a one (full) season wonder, so you can argue that with that decision already made, there’s no downside to making the move early. As Red Bull will see Ricciardo as a potential possible Verstappen teammate, even if he’s the wrong age profile to be a long-term successor, it’s actually a decision in the spirit of the team.

That brings us to Sergio Perez. He has a solid contract for 2024 and it’s probable he will be there next year. However, with every failure to reach Q3 (now six out of 10 in the main qualifying sessions this year) a little extra uncertainty is injected into the situation. Yes, he recovers well usually, but he should do. At times his race pace has been good, at others questionable, but the fact is that qualifying is ‘lap zero’ of the race and he’s compromising the race result with his poor grid positions. Managing just one podium finish in the last five races in the fastest car is a desperate level of underachievement. There’s a feeling within Red Bull that this is partly the consequence of becoming too focused on Verstappen and Perez’s now-extinguished hopes of a title challenge, meaning there is a desire to see him reset and get back to doing the job.

Right now, Perez’s underperformance doesn’t really matter. Verstappen has scored enough points single-handedly to put Red Bull in the lead of the constructors’ championship and both world titles will be sealed. The question Red Bull will be asking is what if the competition gets closer next year? Then, the number two driver can be the swing vote.

If two teams are evenly matched, the second driver is there both to help the constructors’ championship chase – ideally by outscoring the number two of the rival team – but also to assist the lead driver’s individual campaign by taking points off whoever the rival is. Based on current form, Perez would have done that effectively in the early stages of the season, but terribly recently. In 2021, he and Valtteri Bottas had little impact on the fight between Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton, although Perez did make some useful interventions – notably costing Hamilton time in Turkey and Abu Dhabi. But he would need to do more than that were the situation repeated.

That’s the possibility that Ricciardo offers. While five years ago he wasn’t willing to be Verstappen’s backup – a status that ultimately was defined by the fact Verstappen had a small but significant edge on him – now he might well be. He’s endured four seasons largely in the wilderness and spent the past half-year staring down the barrel of career oblivion, so his perspectives will have shifted. The idea of a few years as Verstappen’s wingman, probably picking up a handful of grand prix wins, will appeal.

But there will also be the other tantalizing possibility for Ricciardo that if he can force his way into Red Bull, he should finally get the chance to drive a championship-challenging car. Granted, he’ll be up against an all-time great in Verstappen, but it would at least give him a shot. That’s the one opportunity missing from his mostly-glittering F1 career, and you can be absolutely certain it’s in his mind. That might seem harsh on Perez, but elite sport is a brutal world and Ricciardo has been on both sides of that equation. Performance is everything.

Sergio Perez is capable of contributing more to Red Bull than he currently is – and with Ricciardo lurking around, he might need to. Ryan Pierse/ Red Bull Content Pool

Before he has any chance of playing out this idealized future – and it’s important to note that getting into Red Bull remains an outside chance, given Perez can stabilize the situation by delivering at the level he’s perfectly capable of in the upcoming races – Ricciardo has to perform in diminished circumstances. The AlphaTauri is a tricky car, one that struggles in lower-speed corners with late turn-in instability and mid-corner understeer, and the first thing he must do is prove he can adapt to it.

At McLaren, he couldn’t adapt to the peculiarities of a car that didn’t let him attack the corner confidently. That often led to under-rotation and therefore the extension of the traction-limited phase of the corner, meaning he shed time. The situation got worse in the second season, with security understeer often dialed in and contributed to that under-rotation. His confidence was shot and he was a shadow of the thrilling driver of the past.

The limitations of the AlphaTauri are different and he has set out his stall to head into his comeback with an open mind. But if the old Ricciardo can shine through, then it will give something for Red Bull to think about, as well as putting some extra pressure on Perez to get back into the groove.

You can criticize much of Red Bull’s driver strategy in recent years, but this particular decision at least appears to tick all of the boxes. At worst, it gets to definitely answer questions about Ricciardo with Super Formula ace Liam Lawson waiting in the wings for his chance next year whatever happens. At best, it could get an immediate uplift for its beleaguered second team and, if needed, an alternative to Perez.

But that’s the nature of chaos, sometimes it throws together a set of circumstances that plays in your favor. To avoid relying on chance, it’s essential Red Bull ensures its driver strategy is fit for purpose in this era of F1. And as with everything with modern F1, that means a greater level of rigor and precision when It comes to evaluating the countless drivers operating in the junior categories and karting.

Ricciardo hoping to work his way up to ‘fairytale’ Red Bull return

Daniel Ricciardo admits he might have to work his way back up from AlphaTauri if he wants to finish his career with a “fairytale ending” at Red Bull. The Australian originally graduated from Toro Rosso in 2013 when he took over compatriot Mark …

Daniel Ricciardo admits he might have to work his way back up from AlphaTauri if he wants to finish his career with a “fairytale ending” at Red Bull.

The Australian originally graduated from Toro Rosso in 2013 when he took over compatriot Mark Webber’s seat at Red Bull, before leaving for Renault in 2019. That was followed by a two-year stint at McLaren that ended with Ricciardo’s contract being terminated a year early, and he has since returned to Red Bull as third driver. He has long insisted that he’d only consider a race seat at a front-running team, but suggested he would drive for AlphaTauri in future if it would allow him to earn a promotion to Red Bull once again.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

“This, for me, would be like the fairytale,” Ricciardo told ESPN. “Honestly, the fairytale ending (would be) to finish my career here if I could have it all my own way. But we’ll see. I’ll probably have to work my way up a little bit, but it’s really nice to be back here.”

ESPN reports Ricciardo is not currently in the frame for an AlphaTauri seat this season, and there is not currently an opening at Red Bull next year anyway as Sergio Perez remains under contract until the end of 2024.

Ricciardo will get his first taste of the RB19 next month when he completes a Pirelli tire test for Red Bull at Silverstone – in the days after the British Grand Prix at the same venue – and he previously told Sky Sports he wants to use that opportunity to show the team he has the ability to get the most out of its cars.

“I feel like there is still some unfinished business,” he said last month. “I’m continuing to do simulator. I’m going to jump in the car in July to get back behind the wheel. I’m sure that will really stimulate me and give me all those feels back. Naturally I’m going to put a bit of pressure on myself for that and try to remind the team that I can still do it. We’ll see where it goes.”

Red Bull’s success boils down to team culture – Horner

Red Bull’s success that has led to it winning 100 grands prix is down to the culture within the team, according to team principal Christian Horner. Max Verstappen’s victory in the Canadian Grand Prix was his 41st – matching Ayrton Senna – and made …

Red Bull’s success that has led to it winning 100 grands prix is down to the culture within the team, according to team principal Christian Horner.

Max Verstappen’s victory in the Canadian Grand Prix was his 41st – matching Ayrton Senna – and made Red Bull the fifth team to reach 100 wins after Ferrari, McLaren, Mercedes and Williams. Joining such an elite group, Horner says he believes the sole focus of trying to win races and not being concerned about other aspects of the company sets the team apart. 

“It’s the people,” Horner said. “It’s the spirit. It’s the culture. It’s the attitude that we have. It’s the way that we go about racing. It’s the desire. It’s the passion. It’s the commitment. It’s all of those aspects, because when you work for a team like Red Bull it’s clear what our goal is.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

“We want to win and we want to be competitive and everybody gives their best and they buy into that and you feel that energy in the factory. It’s a culture that we have which is that we’re different to other teams. It’s a racing team – it’s just a big racing team.”

Horner believes Verstappen’s latest success will have resonated with the Dutchman even if he doesn’t publicly show much in the way of reaction to matching Senna’s tally of wins.

“I think part of him inside will be quite proud of that,” he said. “I don’t think he’s one to show huge emotion. He’s a very modest guy, he’s very understated in many ways, but I think behind the scenes it will actually mean quite a lot to him.”

“What we’re witnessing with Max is the emergence of another mega talent, and you can start to talk about him in the same sentences as the greats now. Having matched Ayrton Senna, I thought the podium was actually very apt of the last couple of decades of Formula 1 with Max, Fernando (Alonso) and Lewis (Hamilton) up there.

“He keeps delivering at such a high level, the race was fantastic but for me (qualifying) was outstanding. In conditions that were continually changing, his ability to adapt at all points to whatever tire and whatever grip level that he had was Max at his best.”