logo
Verstappen says Horner exit will not influence own F1 future

Verstappen says Horner exit will not influence own F1 future

TimesLIVEa day ago
Formula One champion Max Verstappen says Christian Horner's sacking as Red Bull boss will make no difference to decisions about his own future and the team still feels like a second family.
Horner's dismissal this month ended a 20-year tenure and fuelled speculation about Verstappen, with Mercedes already interested in securing the four-time world champion.
'Management decided they wanted to steer the ship in a different direction probably,' the Dutch driver, relaxed and smiling, told reporters at the Belgian Grand Prix on Thursday.
'Everyone else has to agree to that and look forward, and I am looking forward.
'I'm also excited for the team now moving forward because that's what we have to do. Looking back doesn't make sense. It's not going to make you faster.
'At the same time we appreciate those 20 years and especially from my side, the 10, 11 that I've been part of Red Bull. Those things will always be remembered.
'The relationship between myself and Christian, for example, that doesn't change. He's not here now during a race weekend but it's still like a second family to me.'
Verstappen has won all his titles at Red Bull, starting in 2021, but his chances of a fifth in a row are receding fast as McLaren dominate.
The 27-year-old said Red Bull's owners had every right to run the team as they saw fit.
His father and former racer Jos fell out with Horner last year, with Verstappen senior urging the Briton to go. The champion said people were entitled to disagree and he had spoken recently to Horner.
'The only thing that matters is that we work on the car and make it as fast as we can make it, the last one-and-a-half-years have not been what we want to be,' he added.
Asked if there was still a possibility he might not drive for Red Bull next year, he smiled: 'There is also a possibility I don't wake up tomorrow. So then there is no driving at all.
'Life is unpredictable. But in general, I'm happy where I'm at.'
Verstappen has a contract to 2028, with release clauses, and has said he hoped to see out his career at Red Bull.
Asked whether he had been surprised by Horner's exit, he replied: 'I think in this world things like that, they can happen. When they told me I was like, 'OK'.
'I don't need to go into detail what they said, but I said 'OK, if you guys think this is the way forward, I'm the driver. You decide and this is how we're going to do it'.'
Verstappen said first impressions of new boss Laurent Mekies were good.
'I like Laurent. He's a nice guy, clever guy,' he said. 'He's been in different areas of the F1 paddock as well and I think that can be helpful.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Norris on pole as McLaren lock-out front row at Belgian Grand Prix
Norris on pole as McLaren lock-out front row at Belgian Grand Prix

The Citizen

timean hour ago

  • The Citizen

Norris on pole as McLaren lock-out front row at Belgian Grand Prix

'Everyone was a bit worried after yesterday, but I wasn't that far off.' Pole position winner McLaren's British driver Lando Norris celebrates after the qualifying session ahead of the Formula One Belgian Grand Prix at the Spa-Francorchamps circuit in Spa, on July 26, 2025. (Photo by Dimitar DILKOFF / AFP) Lando Norris resisted mounting pressure from his McLaren team-mate and series leader Oscar Piastri on Saturday to take pole position for the Belgian Grand Prix. The 25-year-old Briton, whose mother Cisca is Belgian, shrugged aside concerns over his struggles on Friday to clock a best lap in one minute and 40.562 seconds, beating Australian Piastri by 0.085 seconds as McLaren reeled off a convincing front row lock-out. It was his fourth pole this year and the 13th of his career. Charles Leclerc qualified third with a late improved lap enabling him to overhaul defending world champion Max Verstappen's best effort for Red Bull. Alex Albon was fifth for Williams ahead of Mercedes' George Russell, Yuki Tsunoda in the second Red Bull, Racing Bulls' rookies Isack Hadjar and Liam Lawson and Sauber's Gabriel Bortoleto. Seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton failed to make it out of the Q1 session for Ferrari and will start Sunday's 44-lap race from 16th on the grid in the company of Mercedes' mercurial rookie Kimi Antonelli, who was 18th and two-time champion Fernando Alonso 19th for Aston Martin. After victories in Austria and Britain, Norris will be seeking a third consecutive win to overhaul Piastri's nine-point lead in the title race. 'It was a decent lap and I'm happy,' said Norris. 'Everyone was a bit worried after yesterday, but I wasn't that far off. 'There were just a few little issues we had. I was confident that I could get back to the top.' Piastri, who had been faster than Norris in Friday's action, said: 'It's a bit disappointing. The second lap was coming together well and then I made a mistake into turn 14 and I lost a lot of time. The car was very good again, but it's about fine margins.' Leclerc said he was surprised by his time. 'Really bad' 'I didn't expect it. We thought we were a lot more behind. We thought we had something more in the car with the upgrade, but it was a good lap. It takes time to maximise those upgrades.' After a masterclass from Verstappen in the sprint race earlier, Red Bull chose to change his 'skinny' rear wing to a bigger high-downforce version in anticipation of Sunday bringing heavy rain to the sweeping Ardennes circuit. Norris found his pace to clock 1:41.010, six-tenths better than the Ferrari, followed by Piastri two-tenths down in second, the pair showing McLaren's intent under grey skies before a frantic finale during which Hamilton found a late survival lap which was promptly deleted for exceeding track limits. That left Gabriel Bortoleto 15th for Sauber and eliminated the Ferrari driver along with Alpine's Franco Colapinto, Mercedes' rookie Antonelli, who replaced Hamilton, and the two Aston Martins of Alonso and Lance Stroll. Q2 began with everyone on softs and Verstappen fastest, trimming Norris's time, before Piastri and Norris took over for the opening runs. The Dutchman chose not to run again, leaving the usual suspects a clear run to the top-ten shootout while the Haas pair Esteban Ocon and Oliver Bearman exited along with Alpine's Pierre Gasly, Hulkenberg and Sainz. Russell, who was stripped of victory last year because of an underweight car, was first out for Q3, but it was Verstappen again on top before the McLarens flexed their muscle, Norris beating Piastri by 0.189 on their first runs. Verstappen's final run on fresh softs was not enough to resist an improved lap from Leclerc as Piastri also failed to improve, leaving Norris to claim pole position. 'Oh my god, that was really, really bad' said Verstappen, as a rise in track temperature beyond 40 degrees subdued his performance.

Norris takes pole position for Belgian Grand Prix
Norris takes pole position for Belgian Grand Prix

TimesLIVE

timean hour ago

  • TimesLIVE

Norris takes pole position for Belgian Grand Prix

McLaren's Lando Norris pipped championship-leading teammate Oscar Piastri to pole position at the Belgian Grand Prix on Saturday. The Briton lapped the Spa-Francorchamps circuit in a best time of 1:40.562 seconds with Piastri a mere 0.085 slower. Norris will be chasing his third win a row in Sunday's race. Ferrari's Charles Leclerc will start third and Red Bull's reigning champion Max Verstappen, winner of the earlier 100 km sprint, qualified fourth. Piastri leads Norris by nine points going into the 13th grand prix of the 24-round Formula One season.

Verstappen begins new Red Bull era with Belgian sprint win
Verstappen begins new Red Bull era with Belgian sprint win

eNCA

time3 hours ago

  • eNCA

Verstappen begins new Red Bull era with Belgian sprint win

Max Verstappen welcomed new Red Bull boss Laurent Mekies to the race team on Saturday with an immaculate gift-wrapped triumph in the sprint race at the Belgian Grand Prix. The 27-year-old Dutchman, who started from second on the grid, seized the lead on the opening lap and then resisted all threats from series leader Oscar Piastri who had to defend attacks from McLaren team-mate Lando Norris who finished third. It was a consummate performance from Verstappen who ran with a low downforce set-up to give him a straight-line speed advantage – for which he was congratulated by Mekies, appointed on July 9 to replace Red Bull's former boss Christian Horner who was dismissed unexpectedly after 20 years at the helm. "That worked out really well," said a delighted Verstappen after thanking Mekies on the team radio. "We got an opportunity at turn five and took it and then it was tough to keep those two behind. "It was cat and mouse with battery usage and I couldn't afford to make any mistakes, although I had one lock-up – it is so difficult to keep faster cars behind so it was all really at the limit. Not easy! But we did it." Mekies was equally satisfied. "Max was brilliant and all the guys did a great job," said the former boss of Reb Bull's 'B' team Racing Bulls. "He was under massive pressure and he made almost no mistakes and the team extracted everything from the car and the tyres." - Hamilton misery - The leading trio were separated by only 1.4 seconds at the finish, leaving Charles Leclerc a distant fourth for Ferrari, 10 seconds adrift, ahead of Haas's Esteban Ocon and Carlos Sainz of Williams. Piastri said: "I tried my best to snake through on the straight and not give too much tow (on the opening lap) but I didn't have enough straight-line speed. Still, this is a good result, good points and it's only the sprint. Yeah, but it's annoying I couldn't get past him. Norris said: "There wasn't a lot going on after, obviously, a bit of fun at the start and maybe I could have positioned myself a little better. But it was too difficult to get past Max. He drove a good race." Piastri's success in beating Norris, who on Sunday will seek a third consecutive Grand Prix win, extended his lead in the title race from eight points to nine. Piastri made a good start from pole position, but Verstappen showed he had greater straight-line speed with his 'skinny' rear wing set-up and after pulling alongside into Raidillon, he powered into the lead at Les Combes. Lewis Hamilton's miserable weekend continued as he toiled to advance after starting from 18th, following his spin at the chicane in Friday's sprint qualifying. On lap 12, Piastri moved within 0.3 seconds of Verstappen, but he was unable to execute a move on the run uphill from La Source while behind him Norris forced him to defend vigorously against his team-mate. McLaren's intra-team tussle did little to help either driver haul in Verstappen and he was in charge as he delivered his 12th sprint win to mark new boss Mekies' maiden race with Red Bull following Horner's exit.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store