MPH: Will Newey join Hamilton in Vasseur’s Ferrari ‘dream team?
The landscape of F1 looks set to change significantly – will the Ferrari’s new ‘super squad’ feature Adrian Newey as well as Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc?
The scale of Red Bull’s advantage this season had Max Verstappen acknowledging in Jeddah that the world championship is unlikely to go to anyone other than himself or team-mate Sergio Pérez. Having finished second to Pérez in the race, essentially because he had to start 14 places behind him after a driveshaft failure in qualifying, Max was airing his dissatisfaction with the reliability, exactly because it could influence the title outcome.
Could Sergio Pérez, good driver though he is, seriously be considered Verstappen’s title rival? The chances of him outperforming Verstappen over a season have to be considered remote. But that’s an ‘outside looking in’ perspective. There is absolutely no reason why Pérez, as a fully competitive F1 driver, should even begin to think like that – and he’s almost certainly not.
From his words coming into the season, his manner and his performance in the two events to date he’s clearly a man on a mission. He’s much happier with the balance of this car than that of the latter half of last season. Driving it feels more intuitive to him and he is clearly not intending this to be a third year as Red Bull’s support driver.
So he grabbed the opportunity provided by Verstappen’s mechanical mishap and wasn’t about to let it go – not even when a safety car had wiped much of Verstappen’s deficit to him, putting him just 5sec behind with 25 laps still to go.
On previous form Verstappen would easily obliterate such a gap. Especially on a track where the robust hard tyre allowed him to push hard, where the pace wouldn’t be defined by tyre temperatures but by the ability to drive all-out at high speed between the walls. But not on this day. Max was giving it everything but Sergio was only a smidgeon slower. It took 12 laps of flat-out running for Max to reduce a 5.4sec gap to 4.3sec. That wasn’t on schedule to get him on Pérez’s tail before the end.
But as they pushed on, so gremlins threatened. Verstappen began to hear a high-pitched noise from the rear of the car at speed, just like the day before, and its balance off-throttle felt strange. He reported it, the team checked the data but could see nothing. Then Pérez began feeling vibrations. This is all with the backdrop of the cars having only just finished in Bahrain two weeks earlier. There’s something delicate in the transmission.
“In the team, everyone is happy but I’m not happy. I’m not here to be second”
So began the game of a team trying to ensure a 1-2 finish by calling off the fight. But to do that requires the guy behind to back off first. Gianpiero Lambiase, Verstappen’s race engineer, got a feeling of deja vu. He’d been imploring Verstappen to back off even in Bahrain when he had the race already won and was under no threat. Even then, Verstappen had ignored the request for many laps. Now the same request, but with far more motivation for Max to ignore it. “Thirty-three-zero please,” Lambiase requested as Max lapped in 1min 32.3sec. “Confirm 33.0, Max.” Radio silence. Fastest lap of the race so far at 32.2sec. “33.0 please Max.” A lap later Pérez went yet faster, 1min 32.1sec.
Hugh Bird, Pérez’s race engineer, was making the same request. “What times is Max doing?” Checo demanded. Max had just done a 32.6sec. “So why are you asking me to do 33.0sec?” Pérez was quite logically asking why they were pushing and risking a non-finish. What the team couldn’t say was “because Max is ignoring the request”.
These are competitive people and racing in the full knowledge that they are competing with each other for the sport’s biggest prize. With six laps to go Max had done some calculations in his head and realised he wasn’t going to catch Pérez and finally he backed off to the requested lap time. He finally broke the radio silence by asking what the fastest lap of the race was. “We’re not concerned about that,” replied Lambiase. “Yeah, but I am,” said Max. Taking it from Pérez would be a two-point swing between them. He harvested his electrical power for his last lap assault – and duly delivered it. The one point he took for it is the one by which he was leading the championship.
Outsiders took this as disrespectful. It’s nothing of the sort. It is simply intense competitive dynamics, and there is always a fault line where the driver’s interests diverge from those of the team.
“I recovered to second,” he said, “which is good. And of course in general, the whole feeling in the team, everyone is happy but personally, I’m not happy. Because I’m not here to be second, especially when you are working very hard also back at the factory to make sure that you arrive here in a good state, and basically making sure that everything is spot on. And then yeah, you have to do a recovery race, which I like – I mean, I don’t mind doing it – but when you’re fighting for a championship and especially, you know, when it looks like it’s just between two cars, we have to make sure that also the two cars are reliable.”
It’s not just the phenomenal talent, it’s the mental intensity. How does Pérez even begin to fight that? Well, he’d just done a fine job of resistance. But that’s just one race.
Since he began covering grand prix racing in 2000, Mark Hughes has forged a reputation as the finest Formula 1 analyst of his generation
Follow Mark on Twitter @SportmphMark
The landscape of F1 looks set to change significantly – will the Ferrari’s new ‘super squad’ feature Adrian Newey as well as Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc?
In the last three decades, almost every F1 champion has owed part of their success to Ross Brawn or Adrian Newey, who looks set to leave Red Bull. In that way, they’ve had a greater impact on GP racing than any driver during that time, says Mark Hughes
An impatient Max Verstappen was forced off track in his rash bid to pass Lewis Hamilton at the 2018 Chinese GP. Last weekend, in the same situation, at the same corner, he bided his time. Mark Hughes examines the shifting statures of the two champions
The Shanghai circuit gave F1’s teams a new test on every day of the 2024 Chinese Grand Prix weekend, with a familiar result: a double victory for Max Verstappen, well ahead of everybody else
Fernando Alonso admits that he’s not the fastest F1 driver in qualifying, nor the best in the rain. But it’s his ability to drive close to the peak in almost any car, in any condition, that keeps him at the sharp end of the grid, says Mark Hughes
It was 31 years ago yesterday that Ayrton Senna won the 1993 European Grand Prix at Donington in what stands as one of the greatest individual performances F1 has ever…
2024 Japanese Grand Prix analysis: F1 was back to a familiar Red Bull 1-2 in Suzuka, says Mark Hughes. But a different qualifying result could have brought Carlos Sainz into play
Ferrari said it would have challenged for victory in Melbourne even if Max Verstappen hadn’t retired; Mercedes has identified its weak spot. Mark Hughes says that Suzuka will reveal if either team can hope to challenge Red Bull throughout 2024
Investigations involving Christian Horner and Mohammed Ben Sulayem, plus a criminal complaint by Susie Wolff, shows all is not well beneath the glitzy surface of F1, says Mark Hughes. And the series seems to have its head in the sand
We’ve talked here in the last couple of weeks about what Red Bull’s 2025 driver line-up might be. It’s a subject which has become extra complicated during that time because…
It’s been three seasons of struggle for Mercedes and Lewis Hamilton, writes Mark Hughes. But at the 2021 Saudi Arabian GP, Mercedes was on the rise. Pitted against a determined Max Verstappen, the scene was set for one of the great grands prix
Max Verstappen clinched a ninth successive victory in the 2024 Saudi Arabian GP. A race, writes Mark Hughes, that was more notable for its lack of drama — save for an assured stand-in drive by Ferrari’s Oliver Bearman