MPH: Will McLaren's secret weapon drown Verstappen's title hopes in Brazil?

F1
Mark Hughes
November 7, 2025

Max Verstappen is Interlagos's ultimate wet-weather master, but will rain in Brazil give McLaren the edge this weekend?

Max Verstappen (Red Bull-Honda) leads Lando Norris (McLaren-Mercedes) during the wet 2025 British Grand Prix

Verstappen's skills in the wet weren't enough at Silverstone earlier this year

Grand Prix Photo

Mark Hughes
November 7, 2025

Well, the forecast for this weekend’s Sao Paulo Grand Prix is for a very wet Saturday (when we have the sprint race and GP qualifying) and less serious, more intermittent rain for Sunday. Which in the three-way battle for the championship between Lando Norris, Oscar Piastri and Max Verstappen might turn out to be very significant.

But not necessarily in the way that might be expected. Because although Verstappen’s record around Interlagos, particularly in the wet, is fabulous, McLaren just might have a secret weapon which even he might be powerless to counter.

Verstappen’s performance in the Interlagos rain of 2016, his first season with Red Bull, has rightly gone down in legend. Although Lewis Hamilton led throughout, it was 18-year-old Verstappen who created the headlines, using his wet weather lines to pass Kimi Räikkönen and Nico Rosberg to run second and to keep the pressure on Hamilton.

He was doing that as he hit the standing water at the top of the hill on lap 37. Here’s how we called his subsequent miraculous moment at the time: “The Red Bull went completely sideways at huge speed, but he’d got the opposite lock on quickly enough to prevent a full spin and was able to scrub its speed off still within the width of the track.

“As it headed towards the left-hand barrier, most of the sting had been taken out of the moment, and Verstappen calmly released the clutch and induced a small power slide to quickly change its trajectory away from the barrier. It lost him about four seconds – not quite enough for the following Rosberg to capitalise. On the following lap Verstappen was a full one second faster than Rosberg, despite admitting over the radio that the incident had brought his heart rate up a little.”

Related article

Three laps later, Red Bull gambled on bringing him in to change from wets to inters. It was a bold bid for victory, one which would have worked if the rain had held off for a little longer. But as soon as it returned, that gamble was bust and Verstappen was forced to come back in for another set of wets, leaving him down in 17th with just 15 laps left. What followed was mesmerising as he invented new outrageous passing places, barely losing time, passing cars as soon as he encountered them. By the end, he was back up to third place. It was a stunning drive.

After being denied his first win here in 2018 by a lapped Esteban Ocon, he made his breakthrough Interlagos victory in 2019. But they were both dry races, as was his ’23 win when he was chased hard by Norris. The next wet one came last year, where, starting a penalised 17th, Verstappen scythed through the field and was in place to benefit from a red flag to get a free tyre change, this the final springboard to victory. Some of his passing moves under braking on the inside line into the Senna Esses were extraordinary, as he seemed to find grip there inaccessible to anyone else.

Max Verstappen (Red Bull-Renault) during the wet 2016 Brazilian Grand Prix at Interlagos

Verstappen was sensational in the wet in 2016

Grand Prix Photo

That’s a pretty formidable wet-weather Interlagos record and while it’s quite conceivable he adds to that legend this weekend, it’s far from a given. Why so? Two little snapshots of intermediates running at the British and Belgian Grand Prix suggest that on this tyre, the McLaren’s advantage is huge.

Related article

Interlagos: the turning point for F1 championship battles
F1

Interlagos: the turning point for F1 championship battles

From unlikely triumphs to heartbreaks that changed everything, Interlagos has long been the place where championship momentum is forged, and this weekend’s Sao Paulo Grand Prix may not be any different

By Pablo Elizalde

At Silverstone, Piastri passed early leader Verstappen and pulled away from him by 1.9sec and 1.5sec on consecutive laps before they each pitted from fresh inters. He continued pulling away at a huge rate, and by the time the race was neutralised by a safety car, Piastri had pulled out over 14sec on the Red Bull. Fourteen seconds in six laps! Once Norris found a way past Verstappen, he too was whole seconds faster.

We might reason that Verstappen’s low-wing choice – which had got him pole – was why his tyre deg was so much worse than the McLaren’s. Maybe. But that didn’t apply at Spa, where Verstappen had switched to a big wing. Between laps 5-11 on inters, Piastri pulled out 16 seconds on Verstappen in eight laps. There is something about the way the McLaren looks after its rubber which dramatically increases its advantage in the rain.

So that’s how it’s all poised as we head into a weekend where Verstappen really needs to take big points out of the McLarens to have a realistic chance of staying in contention for the title. The skies hold the key.