The Morning Call

New to the driver’s seat

Verstappen in spotlight, F1 lead ahead of US race

- By Jenna Fryer

The lineups were set in advance: Red Bull teammates Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez vs. Stewart-Haas Racing teammates Kevin Harvick and Aric Almirola in a pit stop competitio­n at the ExxonMobil headquarte­rs.

When it came time to loosen and then tighten a set of lug nuts, Verstappen reconfirme­d his calling was inside a race car.

“I think I realized I am not a good guy for the pit box,” Verstappen said. “It is better if I drive the car.”

Verstappen and Perez, like most of the F1 drivers in the paddock, have been on a whirlwind tour of the country ahead of this weekend’s U.S. Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas. The globetrott­ing series is back in North America for the first time since 2019 because the pandemic canceled stops last year in Austin, Mexico City and Montreal.

Now back in Texas for a ninth time, F1 has a new championsh­ip leader in Verstappen who may be somewhat unknown to the American fanbase. The 24-year-old son of former F1 driver Jos Verstappen is having a breakout season — he has a career-high seven wins — and is pushing Lewis Hamilton more than the seven-time champ has been challenged in quite some time.

Verstappen has a six-point lead over Hamilton with six races remaining in a tense title fight that has tilted back and forth all season.

Hamilton, winner of four consecutiv­e titles, last faced a proper challenge in 2016 when Nico Rosburg won the season finale to win the championsh­ip by five points over his Mercedes teammate. Hamilton lost the championsh­ip to Kimi Raikkonen by a single point in his 2007 rookie season, then beat Felipe Massa by the same margin the next year to claim his first title.

This season’s push by Verstappen has given F1 one of its most enthrallin­g title races in years.

But Verstappen doesn’t care for the spotlight and has his focus only on what’s turned into a careerbest season. Half Belgian and half Dutch, he races under the Dutch flag as his father did, and was groomed for this job his entire life.

His rise under his father’s stern guidance has been well-documented, with “Jos The Boss” pushing his son hard as a young karter and instilling a toughness that he’s used this season battling Hamilton.

“He knew what it took to be a Formula One driver and he always prepared me from a very young age to be ready for it,” Verstappen said. “I think in our family we are very focused on what we do and I grew up like that, but that also takes a bit of the stress away and makes it straightfo­rward.”

Although he currently lives in Monaco and dates Brazilian model Kelly Piquet, the daughter of threetime F1 champion Nelson Piquet, Verstappen claims to lead a quiet, somewhat private life.

“I’m just a normal guy and I grew up in a small town,” Verstappen said. “All these things, the drama, it’s just not for me. It’s not my world.”

And yet this title fight with Hamilton has been packed with drama. The two have crashed racing each other twice so far this season, and Red Bull boss Christian Horner accused Hamilton of making a “desperate move” on the opening lap at Silverston­e that crashed Verstappen out of the race.

Verstappen was sent to the hospital after that crash, where he slammed into a tire barrier at an impact that broke the seat in his Red Bull and caused an estimated $1.8 million worth of damage.

In their dustup at Monza, the two raced wheelto-wheel, made contact and Verstappen’s car sailed over Hamilton and landed on the Mercedes.

Verstappen said he tries to stay out of back-andforth between Red Bull and Mercedes because he can only control his own performanc­e.

In Austin, he’ll be racing a circuit where Hamilton has a decided advantage. Hamilton has won five of the eight races held on the permanent road course, while Verstappen in five visits has scored two podiums and only finished ahead of Hamilton once, in 2018 when he edged Hamilton for second.

“I am pretty relaxed to be honest. I know it’s a tight battle but at the end of the day I can’t do more than my best, so I try to prepare the best way possible and enjoy it,” Verstappen said. “The amount of times you are in a championsh­ip battle, I don’t know how many times that will be.

“Of course we are in the lead of the championsh­ip, six races to go, it is going to be difficult, it is going to be hard, but I always try to do the best I can.”

 ?? BRYN LENNON/GETTY ?? Max Verstappen heads to this weekend’s race in Austin, Texas, with a six-point lead in the F1 standings.
BRYN LENNON/GETTY Max Verstappen heads to this weekend’s race in Austin, Texas, with a six-point lead in the F1 standings.

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