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Marko lays bare Verstappen’s problem at Red Bull

The early months of Formula 1’s new era have delivered an uncomfortable truth for Red Bull Racing: even a generational talent like Max Verstappen has limits when the machinery beneath him falters.

After years of dominance, the Milton Keynes outfit has stumbled into the sport’s latest regulation cycle, while grappling with the complexities of becoming an works power unit manufacturer.

Building every component in-house was always going to be ambitious – but few expected such an immediate dip in performance. Reliability issues, misfiring upgrades, and inconsistently behaving chassis pace have combined to leave the bulls searching for answers.

The blunt truth, according to the team’s former sharp-tongued advisor Helmut Marko, is that the brilliance of a four-time world champion is currently being neutralized by a machine that refuses to communicate.

While Verstappen has famously dragged recalcitrant cars to the top step of the podium in years past, the RB22 is proving to be a bridge too far – even for him.

The wrong turn in development

Despite the early season stumbles, Marko remains adamant that the potential is there, even if the recent technical direction has been flawed.

"The positive thing is that the start in Melbourne went quite well, with Isack Hadjar’s third place in qualifying," Marko told APA.

©Red Bull

However, he was also quick to point out that the development path has since hit a significant snag.

"But the updates, especially those in Japan, took the car in the wrong direction. It got worse," he admitted, highlighting the team's current confusion.

Despite the setback, the veteran Austrian expects a resurgence as the circus returns to familiar territory: "Over the course of the European season, it can be assumed that Red Bull can compete at the front again."

Missing the ‘Max Factor’

The most glaring issue for the team isn't just the RB22’s lack of aerodynamic efficiency or raw horsepower; it is the fundamental disconnect between the driver and his tool.

For Verstappen to perform his trademark miracles, he requires a level of predictability that Red Bull’s new-generation car currently lacks.

©Red Bull

Marko suggests that expecting the Dutchman to simply "drive around" the issues is a fallacy until the car provides a stable platform.

"The Max factor is only there when he has a car in which he has confidence," Marko explained with his typical directness. "That is not the case at the moment."

Without that vital trust in the machinery, Verstappen finds himself in the uncharacteristic position of a passenger in his own garage, waiting for the engineers to hand him back the confidence he needs to hunt for his fifth title.

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Michael Delaney

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