logo
Max Verstappen downplays flexi-wings clampdown: "It's all manageable'

Max Verstappen downplays flexi-wings clampdown: "It's all manageable'

Yahoo29-05-2025

Max Verstappen says the fresh clampdown on front wing flexing won't impact his Red Bull's performance and is sceptical about the FIA's intervention affecting his rivals as well.
After imposing stricter limits on rear wing flexing in the off-season, and tightening them further in China and Japan, F1's governing body is also implementing harsher tests from this weekend's Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona.
Advertisement
Many teams and observers in the F1 paddock have been eagerly looking forward to this weekend's race to see how it impacts the pecking order. Some believe frontrunner McLaren has been the most advanced at exploiting aero-elasticity, which is supposed to help with the car's set-up and the compromise between low- and high-speed corners.
But Verstappen, McLaren's main challenger, isn't so convinced and feels the change won't have a big impact.
"Not for us. I can say that with quite a lot of confidence," he said on Thursday in the Barcelona paddock.
"I think those wings never really gave us a massive performance gain. I don't know if we got it wrong or didn't extract the most out of it.
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing
Erik Junius
Erik Junius
Advertisement
"But even for the other teams, I'm sure it's all manageable. If you have a good car, you have a good car. The front wing bends a bit less."
Red Bull has made progress in recent weeks unlocking performance from its RB21 car, and in Imola Verstappen was able to defeat the McLaren in a clean fight, the first time this year that the team has been undisputedly quicker over a race stint.
But Verstappen still feels McLaren may have underperformed in Italy, and when quizzed by Motorsport.com added that he doesn't think their relative performance at the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix will necessarily carry over to the Circuit de Barcelona Catalunya, which is another high-downforce layout that should suit the Red Bull.
"Imola was, of course, at the end very positive. But to try and replicate something like that... I don't know. We'll try to do our best," the four-time world champion said.
Advertisement
"But I also don't know if Imola was just a very strong showing from us or maybe a weaker showing from McLaren. It's very hard to tell."
Last week's Monaco Grand Prix did show Red Bull's long standing weaknesses on bumpy street circuit is still present, so he has singled out high-downforce circuits with fast corner and less kerb riding as Red Bull's ideal hunting ground.
Read Also:
What F1 is clamping down on with flexi-wings at the Spanish GP
Lando Norris claps back at McLaren wing scrutiny: "They have absolutely no idea"
"All the street circuits [will be difficult] car-wise," he said. "And I hate street circuits. I think the more high-speed corners, that will be more competitive for us, actually, because I think that's where you don't really need to hit any kerbs.
Advertisement
"Our car is quite good in the high-speed. We just need to try and bring that a bit more down to the medium-speed and especially the low-speed. We've won two races that have been at quite high-speed tracks, so I think it shows that that's where we are strong.
"All the other tracks where we've been lacking a bit, it's all been a little bit more low to medium-speed."
To read more Motorsport.com articles visit our website.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Norris tops final practice for F1 Canadian GP ahead of Piastri
Norris tops final practice for F1 Canadian GP ahead of Piastri

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Norris tops final practice for F1 Canadian GP ahead of Piastri

Lando Norris of the McLaren F1 Team drives during the final practice for the Formula One Austrian Grand Prix. Luca Barsali/LiveMedia-IPA/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa Lando Norris led an one-two for McLaren ahead of team-mate Oscar Piastri in the final practice for the Formula One Austrian Grand Prix on Saturday. It was a repetition of Friday's second practice result, with the Red Bull of Max Verstappen also completing the top three. Advertisement Ahead of qualifying later, Norris clocked 1 minute 04.324 seconds, 0.118s faster than championship leader Piastri. Verstappen was 0.210s off the pace. Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton were fourth and fifth for Ferrari, respectively, followed by the Mercedes cars of George Russell and Kimi Antonelli. Piastri tops the drivers' standings 22 points ahead of Norris. Tension between the two title contenders peaked at the Canadian Grand Prix two weeks ago when they collided with three laps left to the end of the race, with Norris braking too late and running into the back of the championship leader. Advertisement While Piastri finished the race in fourth, Norris couldn't cross the finish line and missed some crucial points. Verstappen, meanwhile, was second in Montreal and will try to be back on the top of the podium at Red Bull's home race in Austria, but needs to watch out as he's one penalty point away from a race ban.

The Ending of 'F1 The Movie', Explained
The Ending of 'F1 The Movie', Explained

Cosmopolitan

timean hour ago

  • Cosmopolitan

The Ending of 'F1 The Movie', Explained

You've heard this story before: Person from [insert legitimate or criminal career] returns for one last go at [taking down a sworn enemy/entering the boxing ring/pulling off a heist] even though they're older and hardened and said they'd never do it again. Welcome to the genre, F1 the Movie. In the new summer blockbuster hopeful, Brad Pitt stars as Sonny Hayes, a former Formula One driver who retired 30 years prior after suffering terrible injuries in a crash. He's convinced to return to racing on the team of his former friend and fellow ex-driver, Ruben (Javier Bardem). Sonny's teammate is an up-and-coming driver, Joshua Pearce (Damson Idris), and they're on the worst team in the league, APXGP. Will the newbie and the veteran be able to pull off a comeback, save the team from being dismantled by its board, and stop Ruben from being forced to sell it? Will Sonny change his legacy in the sport? Will Joshua make a name for himself? That's what audiences are there to find out. And, if they're F1 fans, they're also there to check out all the cameos from the real drivers and critique how accurate the film is to actual racing. If you've already seen F1 and want a bit more clarity on how things turned out, keep reading. If you think you might see F1 and don't want it spoiled, turn back now! We're about to get into how things shake out for Sonny, Joshua, and the APXGP team. With Sonny driving for APXGP, the team steadily works their way closer to the podium. This is despite Sonny doing a number of things that certainly wouldn't fly in real F1 Grands Prix and Sonny and Joshua not initially getting along. During the Las Vegas Grand Prix—the second to last race of the year—Sonny is injured and hospitalized, at which point Ruben finds out just how bad Sonny's injuries from 30 years earlier were. Like, he was nearly paralyzed and should have never raced again. So, Ruben fires him. After he's released from the hospital, Sonny is approached by APXGP board member Peter (Tobias Menzies), who reveals that he wants Ruben to be forced to sell the team so that he can start his own team, and he wants to bring Sonny on as the team principal. Peter also admits that he forged documents to try to get APXGP banned from racing by saying their car included illegal components. Anyway, just prior to the last race, Abu Dhabi, Sonny returns to the track and is all, "Hey Ruben, you better let me back on this team because... it's the last race, you have no better option." Okay, sure! He also texts Peter a middle finger emoji. In the race, Sonny pulls all of his questionable Sonny stuff again, setting up Joshua to win the race. But, with moments left, Joshua and Lewis Hamilton collide, leaving Sonny to take the lead and win the race. Kate (Kerry Condon) is the APXGP technical director and Sonny's love interest. At the end of the movie, Kate and Sonny say goodbye to one another—for now. Sonny has some business to take care off, which is just temporarily becoming a driver for a different type of race, because it is only through driving that he can seek true euphoria. So, Kate and Sonny are a... long-distance hookup situationship? Not so romantic, but this is about the love of driving cars, man! Joshua was really put through the wringer. He ended up with Sonny as his teammate halfway through the season, was bossed around by him, was hospitalized from a serious crash, missed three races, and returned and almost won the last race only for Sonny to end up winning it instead. In the end, though, he tells Sonny that it's cool that Sonny took this one, because he's "gonna win a million races." You go, JP! Movie shoulda been all about you! To sneaky board member Peter's dismay, it seems APXGP will continue on, because they were able to win one race and having a 60-year-old former racer be the one to win it was quite the sensation! Unclear! A big deal is made about Sonny winning the final race—I mean, the movie is about him, so that's fair, and some drivers never even win one Grand Prix—but we don't get to find out which of the actual drivers won the F1 season. Max Verstappen won the last four IRL, so him, I guess! Or maybe in this fictional movie Lewis Hamilton won the championship because, conveniently, he's a producer on the movie.

F1 practice makes perfect as Norris pips Piastri
F1 practice makes perfect as Norris pips Piastri

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

F1 practice makes perfect as Norris pips Piastri

McLaren wrapped up practice for the Austrian Grand Prix with Lando Norris leading Formula One pacesetter Oscar Piastri in another team one-two at the top of the time sheets ahead of Red Bull's Max Verstappen. Norris, second in the standings 22 points behind Piastri after 10 of the season's 24 races, lapped the Red Bull Ring with a best time of one minute 04.324 seconds - 0.118 quicker than his Australian teammate. Verstappen was 0.210 off the pace, with a big spin at the last corner at the end of the session. He was followed by Ferrari's Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton in fourth and fifth. McLaren topped two of the three sessions, with Mercedes' George Russell fastest in the opening practice on Friday but sixth on Saturday that was much warmer - and getting hotter. Oscar Piastri almost loses it at Turn 9 during FP3 😵 — Formula 1 (@F1) June 28, 2025 "That's why it went a little bit belly-up for us. We were quite competitive until the end, and then you can see really it goes above a certain threshold of temperature and we lose performance," Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff told Sky Sports television. "The McLarens in high-speed (corners) are going to be very difficult to match. "We changed the balance a bit yesterday and that was in a direction that wasn't so perfect. It came back more today, but then the track temperature developed so drastically during the session, we went from 33 degrees to 42 and that makes a big difference." Mercedes had Italian rookie Kimi Antonelli seventh, ahead of Aston Martin's Lance Stroll, Red Bull's Yuki Tsunoda and Sauber's Gabriel Bortoleto completing the top 10. Norris was also fastest in Friday's second session and is looking determined after drawing a blank in Canada two weeks ago when he collided with Piastri.

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