Cringer spice: Max can use exit clause
As the intra-Red Bull conflict intensifies, developments include meetings and heated rows with Verstappen’s dad
Jos Verstappen will not attend this week’s Saudi Arabian Grand Prix following his explosive bustup with Red Bull team principal Christian Horner, as further speculation emerged yesterday regarding his son Max’s future at the team.
Multiple reports in Germany and the Netherlands suggest that Verstappen, the three-time world champion who is contracted to Red Bull until 2028, has an “escape” clause which allows him to follow Helmut Marko out the door should Red Bull Austria’s motorsport adviser ever leave.
Marko, 80, gave Verstappen his big break in motorsport, signing him to Red Bull’s junior programme in 2014 and allowing him to make his Formula One debut the following year.
After reports emerged last year of a power struggle between Red Bull team principal Christian Horner and Marko, Verstappen said he would always stand by Marko.
“Respect and loyalty are my No 1 priority. I also feel that mutual respect from Helmut. I will not let him fall,” Verstappen said in an interview with De
Telegraaf at the end of last year. Speculation that Verstappen might sensationally quit Red Bull emerged last weekend, with reports father Jos was seen courting Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff in Bahrain.
The Brackley team have emerged as a possible destination should the furore at Red Bull not die down. The absence of Jos from the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix — he will be in Belgium competing in a rally — should help in that respect.
The former F1 driver broke his silence yesterday on the poisonous row that has developed between himself and Horner in recent months, and which came to a head in Bahrain last weekend, calling on the Red Bull chief to resign.
“The team is in danger of being torn apart,” Verstappen Snr said. “It can’t go on the way it is. It will explode. He is playing the victim, when he is the one causing the problems.”
Horner was last week cleared by Red Bull’s parent company in Austria of allegations made against him by a female employee.
But the 50-year-old remains under huge pressure after 79 screengrabs, predominantly made up of WhatsApp messages purportedly between Horner and his accuser, were leaked to the media the day after the complaint was dismissed.
Rival teams have called on the sport’s rulers to intervene, demanding more transparency over the process by which Red Bull Austria reached its verdict.
Horner and Jos Verstappen are understood to have had a furious row in Horner’s office in the Bahrain paddock on Saturday, although a video of the pair engaged in animated discussion in the Red Bull paddock home in Bahrain is not thought to be of that row. It is understood to have been recorded on Sunday following Verstappen’s win.
But while they may have celebrated that victory together, Verstappen’s comments about Horner the following day has made their falling out excruciatingly public.
Verstappen Snr also denied being the source of the data leak.
“Why would I do that?” he said. “Max has a contract with Red Bull until 2028, is performing great and feels at home here. I have no interest in that at all.”
Either way, Verstappen Snr will not attend this week’s race in Jeddah. Nor will Horner’s wife Geri or Red Bull’s majority shareholder Chalerm Yoovidhya, both of whom were present in Bahrain to lend their support to Red Bull’s beleaguered team principal.
Meanwhile, Horner staged a face-to-face meeting with Max Verstappen’s representative in Dubai yesterday in a bid to iron out the escalating tensions at Red Bull.
It is understood that neither Jos nor Max were present, with Verstappen’s manager Raymond Vermeulen acting on the Dutch driver’s behalf.
A source said the talks “went well”.