04/08/2025 09:45
Red Bull adviser Helmut Marko believes the team has pinpointed the
issue that plagued Max Verstappen during the Hungarian Grand Prix.
The four-time F1 drivers' champion started eighth and finished
ninth in the Hungaroring after a frustrating afternoon at the end
of a painful weekend for the Milton Keynes-based squad. Marko
labelled it the team's "worst" round all year with the six-time
constructors' champions unable to remedy its usual Friday ailments,
leaving Verstappen scrapping to reach Q3 after Yuki Tsunoda had
become a Q1 casualty for the fourth time in eight grand prix. The
latter endured a quiet afternoon from a pit lane start to P16, only
a mid-race tussle with Nico Hulkenberg saving him from complete
anonymity. Whilst Verstappen put on an overtaking clinic, the
team's early undercut pit stop strategy left him in traffic and
struggling to recoup track position. Jeopardy loomed over the
Dutchman after the stewards opted to investigate his clash with
Lewis Hamilton, which ultimately came to nought, following the
race. Red Bull flirted with the idea of a one-stop strategy for the
27-year-old, but having pitted early for the hard compound, it was
always a long shot and was eventually decided against. When
Verstappen was brought in for the second time from fifth, it
consigned him to his lowly result, a fate worsened by a fundamental
failing on the outskirts of Budapest, according to Marko. "It was
our worst weekend so far," the Austrian told ServusTV . "We didn't
get the tyres working for a moment. "Max Verstappen very briefly
drove as fast as the front of the field, but that only lasted two
or three laps. "Maybe a one-stop would have been faster, but even
then, he would only have been sixth or seventh." The 82-year-old
did, however, feel the team's difficulties were an outlier,
suggesting it had already identified what went wrong. "But we think
we know what went wrong," he later explained to media, including
RacingNews365 . "The tyres didn't work. "With that, it's only about
this weekend. I don't think it will happen again, if that was
indeed the reason."