©Red Bull
As Max Verstappen’s dissatisfaction with the 2026 technical landscape shifts from simmering frustration to a public existential crisis, the man tasked with steadying the Red Bull ship, Laurent Mekies, is desperately trying to extinguish the flames of a sensational retirement rumor.
Lately, Verstappen has begun speaking about the exit door with haunting clarity.
Following a dismal eighth-place finish at Suzuka – where his "undriveable" RB22 left him mired in the midfield – the Dutchman admitted that the relentless 24-race calendar and the controversial new power unit regulations have him questioning his future.
“I’m thinking about everything inside this paddock,” Verstappen told BBC Sport, sounding more like a man looking for a way out than a driver chasing a fifth title.
"Privately I'm very happy,” he added. “You also wait for 24 races. This time it's 22. But normally 24. And then you just think about is it worth it? Or do I enjoy being more at home with my family? Seeing my friends more when you're not enjoying your sport?”
While the world watches Verstappen’s body language, Mekies is performing a delicate act of corporate damage control. The Red Bull team boss insists that behind the garage doors, the focus remains entirely on engineering, and nothing else.
"We are having zero discussions about those aspects," Mekies told media at Suzuka, flatly denying that retirement talks have reached the boardroom.
"We have a lot of work to do, but I'm sure by the time we give him a fast car, he will be a much happier Max.
“And by the time we give him a car that he can push and make the difference with, he will also be a happier Max. So, honestly, that's 100% of our discussions right now, is that."
The Japanese Grand Prix exposed Red Bull’s struggles. Verstappen qualified poorly, ultimately finishing eighth, blocked by Alpine’s Pierre Gasly. Mekies admitted the team is lagging behind its rivals.
"There is nothing to be happy about today,” the Frenchman admitted.
“But in terms of overall gap to the competitions, it looked not too dissimilar to the Melbourne pictures in terms of one second to the best guy, half a second to the best Ferrari.
“But now, McLaren is at that same level. So, we are a distant fourth. That's the reality.”
The intrigue lies in whether a "happier Max" is even possible under the current regulatory framework.
Verstappen has been vocal about his disdain for the new energy management requirements, a sentiment Mekies acknowledged as a work in progress for the entire sport.
"And as per the regs, as you know, they are coming with some good aspects and more tricky aspects," Mekies noted. "And as a sport, with the other teams, we will meet in the break to see how we can tweak them to make things better.”
©Red Bull
Until those tweaks arrive, Red Bull is left fighting its own machinery.
‘I think it's a combination of underlying performance, Melbourne or here. So, some more work we need to do. And a layer of us not being able to extract enough from the package and to give something Max can push with," Mekies explained.
"I'm not suggesting that it's set up tuning. I'm just saying there is something we are wrestling with, with that car that adds to our underlying lack of performance."
Despite the "grim" outlook, Mekies is betting the house on the Milton Keynes “campus” to solve the riddle before their star driver decides that staying at home with family outweighs the grind of a 22-race season.
"Now, trying to solve this sort of complex issues and trying to understand complex limitations is our core business," he concluded.
"So, as much as it feels bad when you are at the back of the top teams like now, that's precisely what the whole campus is set up to do, to get to the bottom of complex limitations like that and nail them, bring development that can mitigate them and improve.
“And it feels bad now, but I have full confidence that that's exactly what our team is very good at.”
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