12/10/2025 20:00
Liam Lawson has explained that he found it difficult to "put it all
together" at Racing Bulls earlier in the F1 season. In the rounds
following his demotion from Red Bull, the New Zealander was unable
to compete with team-mate Isack Hadjar. However, since a "turning
point" at the Austrian Grand Prix, he has been a closer match for
the young Frenchman, who is expected to partner Max Verstappen at
the Milton Keynes-based squad next year. Meanwhile, Lawson is left
fighting for his F1 future along with Yuki Tsunoda. Whilst both
could form the Racing Bulls line-up in 2026, F2 driver Arvid
Lindblad is knocking on the door of a seat at the Faenza team.
Ahead of the Singapore Grand Prix, where the 23-year-old endured
arguably the worst weekend of his career so far with two heavy,
session-ending crashes in practice, he reflected on the campaign in
an interview with Formula 1 . When asked if something had clicked
during the season, or if it was the culmination of little details,
Lawson replied: "I think little details here and there, but I think
we definitely found some things midway through the season to make
me more comfortable in the car. "And I think mid-season point,
probably around Austria, was the turning point, I would say, in
terms of the results coming in. "But it's not a lot really
different. It's not like we found a bunch of lap time in Austria,
and that's just been coming since then; the pace has been quite
good since the start. "It's just a lot has to happen in a Formula 1
weekend. And to put it all together is what we struggled with, and
that's what's clicked recently. "And obviously, I'm well aware that
it can change very quickly in the sport, but that's what we're
trying to keep consistent." Not the time to process Having been
unceremoniously and unexpectedly dropped by Red Bull just two
rounds after his promotion at the end of last year, Lawson has been
on a difficult journey across the season. However, with his future
in the championship on the line, he insists now is not the time to
try and process where he has come from the start of the campaign to
now. "I think it's something that maybe I'll look back on more when
the season's done," he stated. "But you know, I thought that about
the summer break. I thought maybe I'd have some time to reflect on
it. "And in the end, I didn't really think too much about it. I
think it's something that, at least during the season, there's so
much that we're doing, so much going on, that I haven't really
thought about it too much. "Naturally, my brain goes there
sometimes, and I think about a little bit, but we have so much
going on, and especially now, it's a very important time in the
season for me for next year, that maybe it's something I reflect on
more in the offseason."