
Max Verstappen cut a profoundly defeated figure on Saturday afternoon after securing a dismal seventh place on the grid for the British Grand Prix – a result that leaves the four-time world champion facing a bleak, uphill battle on Sunday.
Throughout the 2026 season, the Dutchman has grown increasingly vocal about Red Bull's steady decline in performance, but his comments took a stark, despondent turn following a qualifying session that exposed a staggering deficit in straight-line speed.
On the high-speed tarmac of Silverstone, where raw horsepower is the lifeblood of a lap time, the Dutchman felt that he was going nowhere fast.
‘No point to race like this’
For a driver accustomed to surveying the field from the top step of the podium, a fourth-row start felt like an absolute low point.
Stepping out of the cockpit, Verstappen offered a thoroughly bleak outlook, openly wondering if lining up for Sunday’s Grand Prix was even worth the effort given the severe mechanical deficiencies plaguing his RB22.
"It's just not going forward," said Verstappen, his tone devoid of its usual fiery edge.
"It's just not pulling the same as it was. On a track like this, where that is key, you want as much power as you can. It’s extra painful.

“I've tried a lot of different things through qualifying, but it was just always the same. So, there is a clear problem, and that's something that also worries me for tomorrow, because there is actually no point to race like this.”
A vicious cycle on the straights
The root of Verstappen's despair lies in a brutal compromise. Because his power unit failed to deliver on the straights, the car was forced to drain its energy recovery systems prematurely just to stay afloat.
This created a compounding catastrophe by the time he reached the final sector of the lap, rendering the car entirely defenseless.
“The car yesterday was already not great. I think today, we didn’t really seem to make any improvement on that side, so it was pretty much the same," Verstappen explained.
"But at the same time, [we were] also very slow on the straights for whatever reason on my side of the garage, from the first lap, just down on power. And, of course, around here, when you are down on power, you spend more time on the straights, so you burn your battery more, and that has an even bigger effect in the last sector where basically, out of 15, there is no power.
“So, I just kept losing a lot on the straights. Plus, [the car had] a bad balance, so it was just very, very poor.”

The warning signs had already been glaringly obvious during Saturday's earlier Sprint encounter, where Verstappen plummeted from a third-place starting slot to finish a distant sixth.
The ease with which rival machinery shadowed and bypassed him left the reigning champion with a profound sense of helplessness.
"In the sprint race, we were getting destroyed in the very high-speed [corners]. I had George behind me, who was catching me in dirty air at high speed, so that says quite a lot," Verstappen concluded, thoroughly dejectedly.
"But even in the low-speed [corners], I'm just not happy with how the car has been handling the whole weekend. So, there's a clear disconnect.”
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