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Max Verstappen damns his ‘undriveable monster’ – how bad is it

Max Verstappen’s frustration and anger at the performance of his Red Bull car at the Italian Grand Prix was almost visceral. The world champion is unafraid to speak his mind and he did so to damning effect in Monza, condemning the car as an undriveable monster that might cost him a fourth title. This might be considered hyperbole were it not for the fact that Verstappen has been warning of this for months and Red Bull still have no solution, which suggests the Dutchman may be right and they do have a real problem.

Verstappen qualified seventh in Monza and finished sixth in a race where the winner, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, and the two McLarens of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris in second and third were in a different league, more than 30 seconds clear of the Red Bull. Verstappen’s teammate Sergio Pérez described their car as handling like a boat, about as damning an indictment as any driver can give to a thoroughbred F1 car.

Verstappen still holds a 62-point advantage over Norris with eight races remaining, but his warning that both titles were now “not realistic” given the state of the car seems accurate, especially as McLaren are now just eight points off Red Bull in the constructors’ championship. The scale of this turnabout in fortune is hard to comprehend, doubtless not least at Red Bull. As the season opened, Verstappen won seven of the opening 10 meetings when he was enjoying leads of more than 20 seconds on the field – a canter to the title appeared all but a formality.

Yet what Monza and the preceding five races have proved is that the wheels have come off the machine. Conspiracy theorists have made much of the FIA declaring the use of an asymmetric braking system illegal. It was even reported Red Bull had been using such a system but the team were not, nor does their supposed removal of said system correlate with the downturn in form.

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The real issue they have, which has become increasingly clear since it was first noticeable at the Miami GP in early May, is that the car now fundamentally lacks balance. The front and rear are not working in sync, meaning the car’s behaviour is unpredictable and it cannot be pushed through the corners. Attempts to compensate for it in turn create oversteer, which subsequently works the tyres harder creating degradation and grip problems.

The issues that have created this disconnect appear to have arisen as a result of upgrades the team have been bringing in since the lead‑up to Miami. They are not delivering what the data from wind tunnel testing suggested they would, and problems have worsened with each attempt to solve them.

The team have had to try to improve their package because standing still is not an option. Having been so dominant for two years, Red Bull are reaching the limits of how much more they can eke out of the design of the car but are having to push hard to do so because McLaren have surpassed them, and both Mercedes and Ferrari are now snapping at their heels.

Verstappen’s anger is fuelled partly by the fact that he identified this to the team as far back as Miami and feels they did not address it soon enough, or with enough zeal. Worse still it cannot be written off as a track‑specific issue. Pérez said the problems they were experiencing in Monza were very similar to those they had at the previous round in Zandvoort and the two circuits could not be more diametrically different: Monza a low-downforce, high-speed sweep, and the Dutch race a high-downforce series of largely tight corners.

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