Daily Dispatch

Concern as error-prone Max ‘starts losing plot’

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MAX Verstappen may sometimes appear impervious to criticism but Red Bull technical head Adrian Newey says Formula One’s youngest race winner has been doing some soulsearch­ing as the mistakes mount up.

Verstappen, 20, has stood on the podium only once in the six races so far this season and has had two retirement­s – while Australian teammate Daniel Ricciardo has won twice. The youngster has also drawn plenty of comment and criticism for his errors.

“We’re all human,” Briton Newey told Reuters at a Motorsport Hall of Fame event late on Monday.

“He can try and shrug off everybody else’s comments and opinions but when you’ve had a run like that, you question yourself a bit. Of course you do.

“But I think he’s tough enough that he’ll come through that,” added Newey.

“He’s had one of those bad runs. He’s a great driver, he’s very quick and at some point he’ll shed that [poor sequence] again and be on his way,” he said.

“Part of being a racing driver is learning from your mistakes and I think he’s bright enough to do that.”

Former world champion Nico Rosberg said after Monaco, where Verstappen crashed in final practice and lined up last, that he had not seemed to learn at all despite being in his fourth season.

“At the moment everything is going wrong for him but I don’t have much hope for him anymore,” added the German.

Team principal Christian Horner said after the Monaco crash that Verstappen knew he had to cut out the mistakes.

“He needs to learn from it, and stop making these errors. He knows that more than anybody,” said Horner.

In China he tangled with Mercedes’s Lewis Hamilton and Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel, ending up fifth.

He also collided with Hamilton in Bahrain and retired, while in Australia he spun and finished sixth after starting fourth. —

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