Max Verstappen, the reigning world champion, criticized his Red Bull’s performance after qualifying sixth for Sunday’s race in Monaco; teammate Sergio Perez was eliminated in Q1; watch the Monaco Grand Prix on Sunday from 2pm, live on Sky Sports F1, with coverage beginning at 12.30pm.
Max Verstappen described his Red Bull as a “go-kart” during Monaco Grand Prix Qualifying, and he was “disappointed” with the team’s performance after qualifying sixth for Sunday’s race.
The world championship leader’s RB20 had struggled with the bumps and kerbs of the famed street circuit during practice, but he appeared to have a slim chance of pole heading into the final round of Qualifying.
However, an error on his final flying lap saw him hit the wall on the exit of the first corner, leaving him unable to improve as his nearest title challenger Charles Leclerc took pole for Ferrari.
“I’m not disappointed with the position, I’m disappointed with our performance,” Verstappen told Sky Sports F1.
“It’s not come as a surprise to me because I knew our limitations coming into this weekend. It’s been bad. I can’t take any kerbs.
“In the middle sector, I’m driving around the kerbs. It feels like I’m driving a go-kart, with no suspension and no damping.
“It’s been very difficult for us. I felt really comfortable in the high-speed corners, at least that was enjoyable but in the low-speed we are losing too much, where it’s bumpy and the car is jumping around.”
Verstappen was third after the first runs in Q3 behind Leclerc and Oscar Piastri, but then also fell behind Carlos Sainz, Lando Norris and George Russell.
The Dutchman, who is chasing a fourth successive drivers’ title, has won five of the opening seven races of the season, but has been more challenged by Ferrari and McLaren in recent weeks than at almost any point since he began dominating the sport midway through 2022.
Leclerc is highly likely to reduce Verstappen’s 48-point world championship lead due to the difficulty of overtaking in Monaco, and the Red Bull driver is wary of issue arising again at upcoming races.
“There are a few more tracks coming up where it’s bumpy and you need the right kerbs,” he added. “It’s definitely a limitation for us.”
“If it’s a straightforward race, there’s not much you can do. The cars are so wide and so big, that you can’t pass. We will try to stick with them. We don’t have the fastest car.
“It’s not like we qualified out of position, so there’s not a pace advantage we can use. We will see what happens.”
Perez: Nothing to hope for in race
Red Bull’s challenging Saturday was compounded by Sergio Perez making a shock exit in the first part of Qualifying.
The Mexican started the final season of his current contract in strong form to boost his hopes of earning a new deal, but appears to be in danger of regressing to the poor form he showed for much of last year.
Perez being unlikely to score points gives Ferrari a big opportunity to reduce Red Bull’s 56-point lead at the top of the constructors’ standings, with Leclerc and Sainz well placed to secure a major haul.
“We have been struggling all weekend,” Perez told Sky Sports F1. “We could not get on top of what we have been doing with the car. We have been changing a lot.
“We couldn’t get into the rhythm in Qualifying. That meant we were far off. On my final lap, when things were looking good, I got traffic into Turns Six and Seven. Those couple of tenths were enough to…. I was half a second off P1, so the margins were extremely tight out there.
“There’s nothing to hope for tomorrow. We are out of position, and I don’t think there’s any chance to overt
ake.”
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