The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Red Bull’s new car moved goalposts again?

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FORMULA ONE teams will go testing with some trepidatio­n in Bahrain this week amid fears Red Bull may have again stolen a march with an aggressive evolution of the most dominant car of all time.

The champions’launch of their 2024 challenger, the RB20, last week will not have provided much comfort for rivals still playing catch up from last season when Red Bull won 21 of 22 races.

“I think there will be a few other teams’ technical department­s going where do we go from here?” commented former Jordan, Stewart and Jaguar designer Gary Anderson.

Red Bull’s triple world champion Max Verstappen said his reaction on seeing the first drawings at the end of last season was “Wow, that’s quite different”.

The main focus concerned the new-look Red Bull sidepods, now with tall and slim vertical radiator inlets that looked similar to those attempted and abandoned by former champions Mercedes last season.

Team principal Christian Horner said the car was an evolution of the RB19 but acknowledg­ed it was not conservati­ve and contained real innovation.

“Is that enough? Who knows. That’s the thing about Formula One,” he said.

“We know roughly what we have done from the shakedown at Silverston­e, from what we can tell it’s behaved as we expect it to but that’s no guarantee of anything. It could be that some other team has made a bigger jump than us.

“Last year’s car really was a total surprise in terms of its dominance.”

The fear is that Red Bull may have moved to another level of developmen­t while rivals, some of whom have said openly that they consider the champions to be beatable, launched cars clearly influenced by the RB19.

“I believe we have made some good steps in the right direction so it should be another great season for the team,”said Red Bull’s Mexican Sergio Perez.

Teams have three days of testing in Bahrain from February 21 to 23 before the opening race on March 2.

“It’s a bit like waiting for Christmas. It is exciting,” said Mercedes technical director James Allison of the pre-season “phoney war” period and the uneasy mix of anticipati­on and trepidatio­n.

“You want it to arrive, and you want the days to fly by. You also know that the Christmas Day opening of those presents might not bring you all the good fortune you wish for.

“It’s not a relaxing time of year, but it is very exhilarati­ng,” he said. — Reuters

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