Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

DS Penske shines in the rain in second Formula Shanghai E-Prix

Formula E
Shanghai ePrix II
DS Penske shines in the rain in second Formula Shanghai E-Prix

How the F1 cost cap has put extra emphasis on the upgrade debate

Feature
Formula 1
British GP
How the F1 cost cap has put extra emphasis on the upgrade debate

Formula E Shanghai E-Prix: Di Grassi grabs Lola’s first win, Wehrlein takes championship lead

Formula E
Shanghai ePrix II
Formula E Shanghai E-Prix: Di Grassi grabs Lola’s first win, Wehrlein takes championship lead

F1 to decide before summer break on recovering Middle Eastern race

Formula 1
British GP
F1 to decide before summer break on recovering Middle Eastern race

“They shouldn't ask me that anymore” – Why Verstappen doesn't believe in another Red Bull comeback

Formula 1
British GP
“They shouldn't ask me that anymore” – Why Verstappen doesn't believe in another Red Bull comeback

How “stressed” Antonelli beat his nerves – and Leclerc – in British GP qualifying

Feature
Formula 1
British GP
How “stressed” Antonelli beat his nerves – and Leclerc – in British GP qualifying

What we learned from the 2026 F1 British GP sprint race and qualifying

Feature
Formula 1
British GP
What we learned from the 2026 F1 British GP sprint race and qualifying

Wolff: "Emotional" Vasseur misunderstood comments on Ferrari

Formula 1
British GP
Wolff: "Emotional" Vasseur misunderstood comments on Ferrari

Verstappen rues F1’s ‘irritating’ red flag rules

Max Verstappen thinks that Formula 1’s red flag rules tempt drivers to take too many risks on final runs in Monaco Grand Prix qualifying.

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB18

For the second year running, Verstappen saw his hopes of a top grid slot dashed by someone else’s mistake bringing out a red flag and stopping the qualifying session.

Last year, pole position man Charles Leclerc crashed at the Swimming Pool exit chicane and brought out the red flags, while this time it was a spin from Red Bull’s Sergio Perez that brought things to a halt.

A frustrated Verstappen admitted that it ‘sucks’ that drivers who take things too far and crash get away with keeping their grid positions.

“It is irritating and a pity of course that the one who put it in the wall was my team-mate,” he said.

“But in the end you don't get a penalty for that. So if you know you have a good first run, then you can think: ‘ah well, you know what, I'll park it and tactically send it into the wall.’ You could do that.”

Leclerc's crash last year prompted some debate about whether or not F1 should adopt red flag rules used in other categories – where drivers who stop sessions lose their best laps.

In the end, the discussions did not move forward and right now there is no downside to a driver bringing out a red flag.

Asked if the rules needed to change, Verstappen said: “That's something we've been working on for a while.

“It's nice for the person who hangs it in the wall. But for me it's a bummer, of course.”

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB18

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB18

Photo by: Carl Bingham / Motorsport Images

Lack of front end

Verstappen has had a weekend where he hasn’t appeared to be as comfortable with the Red Bull as team-mate Sergio Perez.

The world champion will start fourth on the grid, one place behind his Mexican team-mate.

Reflecting on what has happened, Verstappen thinks setup choices have not given him the sharp front end that he likes in a car – although he believes a front row slot was potentially still on the cards.

“We tried a few things with the car in practice and not all of those things worked out well,” he said.

“Then we changed a few things for qualifying, which I think made it a bit better.

Read Also:

“I just didn't have enough grip the whole time, at the front. And here in Monaco it is very important that the car turns very quickly and I didn't have that. And then you just lose a lot of time because you can’t attack the corners.

“He [Perez] is just feeling a bit more comfortable. He had the balance more how he wanted it. He can drive with a bit more understeer, he likes that. But for me the car has to be very strong at the front.”

Previous article Autosport writers' favourite F1 Monaco Grands Prix
Next article The five factors that will decide Monaco’s F1 fate

Top Comments