EXPOSED: THE MAIN RIFT BETWEEN MAX VERSTAPPEN AND LEWIS HAMILTON HAVE BEEN EXPOSED AND DISCLOSED…AFTER A JOURNALIST GET…

Red Bull staff exodus dashes Verstappen’s hope they would “keep the team together”

Red Bull arrived at last year’s Miami Grand Prix in a strong position. They’d swept the opening four rounds of the season and only failed to fill the top two places once.

In the second year under F1’s new technical regulations it was clear Red Bull’s design team, headed by chief technical officer Adrian Newey, had sussed its intricacies far better than any of their rivals had. Prior to the Miami race, Red Bull let it be known Newey’s contract had been renewed.

Max Verstappen, who was about to embark on a record-breaking run of 10 consecutive grand prix wins, reiterated his commitment to the team ahead of the race weekend, while stressing the importance of continuity among their championship-winning staff.

“Nothing will influence anything to ’28 because I have a contract,” he said. “But I’m very happy, of course, that Adrian stays.

“But that goes for everyone in the team, right. When you’re doing really well, you want to try and keep that whole group together, and that’s, of course, also the target for the team, for the future.”

However the picture has changed drastically in the year-and-a-half since then. Red Bull are no longer the competitive force they once were and several high-profile names have confirmed their departures. Inevitably, many are wondering whether the two things are related and, above all, whether their three-times champion driver might be the next to leave.

Red Bull’s downturn in form has made Verstappen’s championship lead, which once seemed almost unassailable, look more vulnerable. He’s still the overwhelming favourite to clinch this year’s crown, but a stumble over the final rounds could make the threat from Lando Norris much more serious.

But while Red Bull showed they have begun solving their problems with Verstappen’s run to second place in Singapore, the brain drain at the team may concern the driver more. The loss of Newey to Aston Martin inevitably made big headlines, but he is one of several significant figures who has left or will do soon. Newey is Aston Martin’s second major hiring from Red Bull after Dan Fallows, who was their chief engineer for aerodynamics, and switched teams in 2022.

McLaren, who passed Red Bull for the lead of the constructors’ championship two races ago, have also made major signings from the world champions. Less than a month after that Miami race, McLaren announced it had hired Red Bull’s chief engineering officer Rob Marshall. He will be joined by McLaren’s latest hiring, Red Bull’s chief strategist Will Courtenay, who will become their sporting director.

The same role at Red Bull is currently held by Jonathan Wheatley. He will relinquish the position at the end of the year and join Sauber as its team principal, ahead of its rebranding as Audi.

How well Red Bull handles the combined effect of these departures remains to be seen. But their rivals believe it may take more than one season for the consequences to become apparent.

“I think the turmoil will have more of the mid-to-longer term impact,” McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown told media including RaceFans earlier this year. “Adrian Newey: This car was done last year. What they’re racing now was done when everything was fine.

“I think it’s more of ’26 when you’ve got a new engine coming, what’s going on with the driver front, I think that’s where you potentially are going to see the lack of stability that appears to be there, maybe come through a little bit.”