Business Day

Bahrain tests: all eyes on Red Bull

- Alan Baldwin

Red Bull will have plenty of questions hanging over them when Formula One testing starts in Bahrain on Wednesday, with rivals eager to see how their cars stack up against Max Verstappen’s and team boss Christian Horner fighting for his future.

The dominant 2023 champions, with 21 wins in 22 races, launched their new RB20 car last week with some design features reminiscen­t of those tried and discarded by rivals Mercedes last season.

Some observers sensed all might not be as it seemed, but Wednesday should provide an immediate answer to those doubts, even if the lap times may not mean much as teams work through various programmes.

“Let’s see the car that rocks out on day one at Bahrain because I’m not sure it’s going to be that [launch] car,” former McLaren performanc­e engineer and Aston Martin strategist Bernie Collins said.

“If they do rock up with that car, it’s a brave, brave move because they could have easily continued to develop the car they had and that would have been the safer bet,” she said.

“If they go with it they’ve clearly seen something that means they think they can beat their previous developed car.”

Questions about Horner, who will be in Bahrain, will remain unanswered until the energy drink company completes a probe into allegation­s by a female employee.

Pecking order

Mercedes, Ferrari, McLaren and Aston Martin are all hoping to be closer to Verstappen, chasing his fourth title in a row this season, but the real pecking order may not be apparent for some time.

Seven times world champion Lewis Hamilton will meet the media for the first time since his switch to Ferrari in 2025 was announced and will also have a clearer idea of how competitiv­e his Mercedes will be.

There will be much interest in Visa Cash App RB, the renamed Red Bull-owned AlphaTauri team, who now have closer ties to the main Red Bull team and could also have a more competitiv­e car.

Teams have only three days of testing, with one car each, with the track time reduced as the championsh­ip expands to a record 24 races.

That means drivers have only a day and a half each on track before the opener on March 2, with the first two races in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia held on Saturdays to fit in with the start of Ramadan on March 10.

THE 2023 CHAMPIONS LAUNCHED THEIR NEW RB20 CAR LAST WEEK

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