F1 News, Reports and Race Results

‘No grip, no balance’: Verstappen calls Red Bull’s Friday ‘a disaster’

Max Verstappen did not bother to sugarcoat his performance after sprint qualifying for the Chinese Grand Prix. The verdict from the Red Bull driver was blunt, cutting, and impossible to misinterpret.

“The whole day has been a disaster, pace-wise,” the Dutchman lamented on F1 TV.

Friday’s running delivered a harsh reality check to the bulls. Verstappen ended the only practice session eighth – a staggering 1.8 seconds behind the benchmark set by Mercedes’ George Russell – before qualifying just eighth for Saturday’s Sprint race.

The underlying problem, according to Verstappen, was painfully simple.

“Yeah, no grip. Honestly, I think that’s the biggest problem – no grip, no balance, just losing massive amounts of time in the corners, to be honest,” he explained.

“Then, of course, because of that, you start to trigger other little problems. But the big problem for us is just the cornering is completely out.”

From frustration to damage limitation

The warning signs appeared immediately in sprint qualifying. Verstappen limped through SQ1 in 11th, openly complaining about the “horrendous” driveability of his RB22.

Although he scraped through the session and climbed to eighth by SQ3, the numbers told a grim story.

©Red Bull

His deficit to Russell ballooned as the session progressed – from 1.140s in SQ1 to 1.734s in the final shootout. Even worse for Red Bull, rookie team-mate Isack Hadjar ended up 10th and another half second slower.

The performance leaves the Milton Keynes outfit looking unusually vulnerable under Formula 1’s new 2026 regulations – particularly against a Mercedes team that appears to have mastered the rules from the outset.

Searching for answers

With the Sprint race looming and full qualifying still ahead, Verstappen admitted the team now faces a difficult puzzle.

“We’ll have a look. I don’t know at the moment what we can do. We’ll see,” he said.

©Red Bull

That uncertainty reflects a broader unease within the Red Bull camp. Even before the Shanghai weekend began, Verstappen had tempered expectations after a difficult opening round in Australia.

“Impossible to know. I mean, honestly, it’s such a jungle out there at the moment. I think that it’s very hard to really know. I mean, I would hope that it gets a bit closer, not even bigger than the gap that it was in Melbourne, but it’s clear that at the moment we cannot fight with those cars.”

If Friday’s evidence is anything to go by, the four-time world champion’s fears may already be turning into reality.

Read also:

Verstappen’s frank admission: ‘I don’t need to be only an F1 driver’

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Michael Delaney

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