Yesterday at 06:30
Yuki Tsunoda has explained how a gradual shift towards Max
Verstappen's set-up has enabled him to unlock more performance for
Red Bull. After struggling alongside Verstappen since his Japanese
Grand Prix promotion, Tsunoda gave up some of his August holiday to
work in the simulator to try and unlock solutions behind his
struggles, mainly in race pace. There had been signs of an
improvement with seventh on the Belgian Grand Prix grid and scoring
points at Zandvoort, before putting in his best performance in
Azerbaijan, scoring sixth in the race. That was the 25-year-old's
best result since fourth at the 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. Despite
a disappointing weekend at the Singapore Grand Prix, where he
qualified in P13 — only after the Williams pair of Carlos Sainz and
Alex Albon were disqualified from the grid-setting session — and
finished the race only one spot higher, in P12. Detailing the
upward trend, Tsunoda pointed to a gradual drift towards
Verstappen's set-up in the RB21 as one factor behind it. "Since
Day 1, I was only focusing on what I wanted from the car, rather
than trying to chase Max's set-up," Tsunoda told media, including
RacingNews365. "I still consider what kind of set-up he's using
because he's always able to extract performance from each track,
almost the maximum, from the set-up, so obviously, there are some
ideas on what kind of car will be there from FP1. "But I definitely
try to consider what they're doing in terms of set-up changes, and
try to combine it both ways, and that's what we've done since Day
1. "That quality has got better and better, and naturally, I
started to adapt more to Red Bull and be able to drive on the limit
and naturally become slightly closer to the 'Max set-up', which is
good." With Isack Hadjar broadly expected to partner Verstappen at
Red Bull next season and Arvid Lindblad potentially taking a seat
at Racing Bulls, Tsunoda could find himself in a tight battle with
Liam Lawson for the remaining drive within the energy drinks
manufacturer's two teams.