Weekend Herald

Red Bull keeping drivers up to the Marko

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Above: Dr Marko ( right) and the team celebrate a Red Bull win. Right: Daniil Kvyat at Hampton Downs.

By my count, 57 drivers who have been through the programme have been cast aside for one reason or another, including Le Mans winner and FIA World Endurance Champion, Kiwi Brendon Hartley. Six drivers have made it into regular Formula 1 seats with the Red Bull “junior” team Toro Rosso, and six have made the Red Bull Formula 1 team. The programme currently has four young drivers under contract.

That’s a staggering number in total, and that’s just the singleseat­er section, with more in the motorcycle and other motor sports categories.

Though many of these drivers are grateful for the support of Red Bull initially, it is a case of perform, improve, win, or OUT you go, with any contracts written being heavily in favour of Red Bull.

This was brought more to light during the week running up to the Malaysian Grand Prix, when it was announced Russian Toro Rosso F1 team driver Daniil Kvyat was to be dumped — my word, but that effectivel­y is what it is — from his seat at Toro Rosso for the latest “hot- shoe” to come on to the scene — young French driver Pierre Gasly. Officially Kvyat is being “rested” for the next few races but to do that mid- season is a merciless indictment of his abilities. Due to a clash in Gasly’s racing commitment­s it is likely Kvyat will be back in the seat later in the season but his future with Red Bull and in Formula 1, remains on a knife edge.

Marko was similarly merciless when he installed Max Verstappen in the Red Bull team and effectivel­y demoted the incumbent Kvyat to Toro Rosso mid- season last year.

It was hoped Kvyat would respond to that move by putting his head down and improving his performanc­e but sadly he seems to have gone the other way with a continued litany of mistakes and below average performanc­es.

There is considerab­le sympathy in the paddock for Kvyat, a competitor in the Toyota Racing Series in New Zealand in 2011. Many believe his treatment by the good doctor is at the root of his performanc­e woes. But this is a tough business in a tough environmen­t and sentiment counts for little. A look at the list of those drivers previously cast aside is proof of that.

As much as Marko is critiqued, he is doing the job entrusted to him as the man in charge of the developmen­t programme as well as being the trusted advisor to Dietrich Mateschitz, the billionair­e co- founder of Red Bull and the ultimate authority over the racing programme and the Red Bull / Toro Rosso Formula 1 teams.

Marko can be seen at each grand prix staring intently at the timing screens with barely a flicker of emotion, personifyi­ng the “hard man” attitude he is known for.

In a recent article by Joe Saward, perhaps the most intuitive of all the Formula 1 journalist­s, Marko is quoted as saying: “Families . . . have sold their houses to help the careers of boys who were not good enough. Not everybody can drive in Formula 1, let alone become world champion. This is a fact that you just have to deal with.”

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