01/06/2025 10:00
Yuki Tsunoda pointed to the "core limitation" of his Red Bull to
explain his shock early elimination from qualifying for the Spanish
Grand Prix. The Japanese driver will line up P20 - and last - at
the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya after battling against a lack of
"overall grip", which is what he suggested was that main
limitation. Having cycled through various set ups to no avail and
finishing the three free practice sessions in ninth, P13 and P14
respectively, he was half a second slower than Max Verstappen and
quarter of a second shy of the knockout line in Q1, leaving him
consigned to his fate. It left him questioning how his pace has
dropped "like hell" this weekend, having been making progress
towards his team-mate's high bar. "Until the previous grand prix,
especially until Monaco, I was having good progress throughout,"
Tsunoda told media including RacingNews365 . "Last two grand prix,
in some sessions I was matching or a bit faster than Max and
suddenly it drops like hell. "Whatever I do nothing happens. Every
lap - even long run was a good example. Just whatever I do, nothing
happens and it feels like this car is eating the tyres like hell,
having degradation massively. "It doesn't really stack up. I think
the core limitation is still there and I don't know what it is and
I can't really have any answer for that." Unable to 'cure the core
limitation' Tsunoda expects the aforementioned "core limitation"
will still plague his RB21 during the race in Spain, but is
nonetheless targetting a top 10 finish. "I'll try my best... What I
can do to be in top 10, I'll do," the 25-year-old said. "But the
thing is, I don't think we were able to cure the core limitation
since FP2, which was like really lap by lap just tyres degrading.
So in that sense it will be tough realistically. "But hopefully
with a couple of set up changes we'll make it a little bit better,
but other than that let's see how it goes." However, when asked if
that opens the door for a pit lane start and more substantive
changes, Tsunoda said he does not see much point in taking that
route unless Red Bull can identify - and cure - what is causing the
core limitation.