Springfield News-Sun

Verstappen-perez relationsh­ip shows apparent fracture

- By Jenna Fryer

Max Verstappen needed only four words for Sergio Perez after his Red Bull Racing teammate dutifully held up Lewis Hamilton in last year’s Formula One season finale.

“Checo is a legend,” Verstappen radioed last December.

The phrase made its way onto merchandis­e, and some began referring to Perez as “Mexico’s Minister of Defense” for his commitment to aiding his twotime F1 world champion teammate.

The camaraderi­e apparently has fractured in the year since Verstappen beat Hamilton at Abu Dhabi to win his first F1 title. Verstappen steadfastl­y refused to help Perez on the final lap Sunday of the Brazilian Grand Prix, where Red Bull asked the Dutchman to pull over and give Perez sixth place.

Perez needed the spot because he’s in a fight with Charles Leclerc of Ferrari for second in the final F1 standings, which will be decided in this Sunday’s season finale at Abu Dhabi. Verstappen’s defiance left Perez and Leclerc tied in the standings; had he given up the spot, Perez would hold a two-point advantage.

The radio transmissi­ons between Verstappen and Red Bull raised eyebrows, as did the later images of team boss Christian Horner huddled in the team’s hospitalit­y suite with his drivers, trying to tamp down a dramatic refusal of team orders that could tarnish Red Bull’s incredible season.

“Max, what happened?” asked Verstappen race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase, who had plainly told Verstappen to yield sixth to Perez.

Verstappen’s reply was curt: “I told you already last time. Don’t ask that again to me. Are we clear about that? I gave my reasons and I stand by it.”

On the Perez channel, Horner immediatel­y apologized to the Mexican driver. Perez simply replied: “It shows who he really is.”

It was a bad look for the 25-year-old Verstappen, who already has a reputation for unapologet­ically doing whatever he wants at Red Bull.

Now he’s seemingly put himself above the team and the only logical reason could be out of spite.

After all, Verstappen wrapped up his second F1 title with four races remaining. He and Perez helped Red Bull win the constructo­rs championsh­ip with three races remaining, and Verstappen set the single-season record for wins in a season with 14 victories and can add to that total.

Two races ago in Mexico City, where Perez desperatel­y wanted to become the first Mexican to win his home race, Verstappen said in advance that he would not move out of the way to help his teammate reach that goal.

Verstappen went on to win his record-breaking 14th race while Perez finished a disappoint­ing third.

Why quibble over sixth place in Brazil?

Perez was stunned and grumbled after the race that he helped Verstappen win his back-to-back titles and has been the consummate No. 2 teammate. There were at least eight instances of Perez running interferen­ce for Verstappen in last year’s nail-biting title race with Hamilton.

It has continued this year, too, when Perez followed Red Bull orders at the Spanish Grand Prix in May to let Verstappen through to win the race. Perez even has supported Verstappen off the track: When the Dutchman boycotted official broadcast partner Sky Sports F1 two weeks ago at the Mexico City Grand Prix, Perez joined him and didn’t speak to the network, either.

There was post-race speculatio­n in Brazil that frustratio­n has been simmering since Monaco in May because Verstappen believes Perez intentiona­lly crashed at the end of qualifying. Perez won the race, Verstappen finished third and Verstappen apparently hasn’t let it go over five months, despite picking up 10 more victories.

Red Bull claims that Monaco did not even come up in Sunday’s post-race peacekeepi­ng session.

Red Bull is determined to go 1-2 in the drivers’ championsh­ip standings for the first time in its history, but Verstappen’s defiance has made Perez’s job far more difficult this weekend in Abu Dhabi.

Horner said his drivers shook hands Sunday after their team meeting, but precedent has been set by Verstappen that Red Bull team orders are optional.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States