Motor Sport Magazine

There’s just no stopping him

While Max remains in a league of his own, Mark Hughes turns his attention to more interesting matters – the battle for second

As the Max Verstappen/Red Bull steamroller of the world championship continues, the intrigue is all about what is going on behind. Behind Verstappen on track and behind the scenes at Red Bull.

The prospect of Verstappen leaving the team has receded somewhat. Following his comments earlier in the year that he’d be leaving if Helmut Marko was no longer there, and with the subsequent confirmation that Marko is staying, so Verstappen has said he “is going nowhere”. But as speculation remains about the partnership’s future, so it continues its assault on the Formula 1 record books. As F1 moved from Australia to Asia for the Japanese and Chinese races, that domination looked unassailable.

Just like last year when Verstappen arrived in Suzuka on the back of a rare defeat (at the hand of Carlos Sainz again), he hit back very hard. Just like last year, he was 20sec clear of the best non-Red Bull (Sainz) at the flag. This time he had his team-mate Sergio Pérez cushioning him from the others.

It wasn’t a very complex race. The performance hierarchy was very clear and the cars ultimately settled down into that order. But Lando Norris had overqualified the McLaren, starting from third on the grid ahead of Sainz’s Ferrari, a position it maintained down to the first corner, as Verstappen eased himself clear of Pérez at the front. In fact this all happened twice, for the first race was red-flagged almost immediately

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