The Prague Post - Troubled Red Bull search for path back to fast lane

EUR -
AED 4.172164
AFN 82.347902
ALL 99.351397
AMD 444.443277
ANG 2.047196
AOA 1035.939723
ARS 1361.080559
AUD 1.782054
AWG 2.047459
AZN 1.900287
BAM 1.954844
BBD 2.292079
BDT 137.922527
BGN 1.954582
BHD 0.428122
BIF 3374.919256
BMD 1.135899
BND 1.491904
BOB 7.844163
BRL 6.670033
BSD 1.135145
BTN 97.183457
BWP 15.647345
BYN 3.714919
BYR 22263.62649
BZD 2.280305
CAD 1.581456
CDF 3265.710098
CHF 0.926116
CLF 0.028705
CLP 1101.538261
CNY 8.34711
CNH 8.30243
COP 4942.297901
CRC 570.920702
CUC 1.135899
CUP 30.101332
CVE 110.211084
CZK 24.99318
DJF 202.149328
DKK 7.466703
DOP 68.576452
DZD 150.678211
EGP 58.028513
ERN 17.03849
ETB 151.044438
FJD 2.602359
FKP 0.859237
GBP 0.856258
GEL 3.12315
GGP 0.859237
GHS 17.572403
GIP 0.859237
GMD 81.215892
GNF 9825.193452
GTQ 8.746721
GYD 237.501722
HKD 8.81551
HNL 29.429603
HRK 7.536805
HTG 148.180986
HUF 407.756611
IDR 19083.392395
ILS 4.183614
IMP 0.859237
INR 97.282164
IQD 1487.072515
IRR 47835.550212
ISK 145.304423
JEP 0.859237
JMD 179.37225
JOD 0.805807
JPY 162.091125
KES 147.12163
KGS 99.297587
KHR 4546.53565
KMF 492.48152
KPW 1022.31688
KRW 1610.676817
KWD 0.348324
KYD 0.946029
KZT 594.509162
LAK 24585.189205
LBP 101713.441127
LKR 338.81425
LRD 227.036933
LSL 21.397432
LTL 3.354015
LVL 0.687094
LYD 6.209962
MAD 10.540344
MDL 19.63822
MGA 5171.515589
MKD 61.499914
MMK 2385.10382
MNT 4026.913076
MOP 9.073681
MRU 44.976997
MUR 51.320079
MVR 17.503864
MWK 1968.437028
MXN 22.742064
MYR 5.009887
MZN 72.588857
NAD 21.397432
NGN 1824.378927
NIO 41.777723
NOK 12.073616
NPR 155.493931
NZD 1.920232
OMR 0.437341
PAB 1.135255
PEN 4.247322
PGK 4.694703
PHP 64.44076
PKR 318.365354
PLN 4.292066
PYG 9082.556754
QAR 4.137576
RON 4.977613
RSD 117.192669
RUB 93.992374
RWF 1612.896761
SAR 4.262179
SBD 9.5056
SCR 16.227204
SDG 682.107767
SEK 11.155366
SGD 1.492822
SHP 0.892639
SLE 25.841838
SLL 23819.222151
SOS 648.782611
SRD 42.198456
STD 23510.82236
SVC 9.933141
SYP 14768.960495
SZL 21.414335
THB 37.714694
TJS 12.265152
TMT 3.987007
TND 3.404435
TOP 2.660392
TRY 43.305256
TTD 7.709229
TWD 36.898557
TZS 3061.248468
UAH 46.902055
UGX 4162.963451
USD 1.135899
UYU 48.096471
UZS 14735.791156
VES 87.598339
VND 29357.317685
VUV 139.397196
WST 3.176409
XAF 655.601646
XAG 0.034468
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.069825
XDR 0.817098
XOF 655.636259
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.664501
ZAR 21.412721
ZMK 10224.474168
ZMW 32.239228
ZWL 365.759115
  • RBGPF

    0.1400

    63.59

    +0.22%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    21.76

    -0.18%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    9.64

    -0.62%

  • SCS

    -0.0200

    9.93

    -0.2%

  • RELX

    0.2600

    51.77

    +0.5%

  • NGG

    0.7500

    71.73

    +1.05%

  • GSK

    -0.1150

    35.565

    -0.32%

  • BTI

    0.0900

    42.41

    +0.21%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    9.29

    +1.94%

  • BCC

    -1.0800

    92.79

    -1.16%

  • AZN

    -0.3400

    67.53

    -0.5%

  • CMSD

    -0.0200

    21.86

    -0.09%

  • RIO

    -0.0900

    57.17

    -0.16%

  • BCE

    0.3750

    21.615

    +1.73%

  • BP

    0.7250

    27.935

    +2.6%

  • JRI

    -0.0270

    12.243

    -0.22%

Troubled Red Bull search for path back to fast lane
Troubled Red Bull search for path back to fast lane / Photo: Andrej ISAKOVIC - POOL/AFP

Troubled Red Bull search for path back to fast lane

Ailing Red Bull arrive on the Red Sea for this weekend's Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in Jeddah desperate to prevent their 2025 season sinking into mediocrity.

Text size:

The Austrian Formula One giants left Bahrain on Sunday in sombre mood, their limitations laid bare under the harsh floodlights in the desert of Sakhir.

Here AFP Sport assesses the issues that threaten to derail Max Verstappen's quest for a fifth successive world title:

The state of play

Verstappen slipped to third in the drivers' standings, eight points behind McLaren's leader Lando Norris, after trailing in sixth, over half a minute behind Norris's teammate Oscar Piastri, in Bahrain.

He has accounted for all bar two of the team's tally in the constructors' championship where they are lagging a massive 80 points behind runaway leaders McLaren after just four races.

Crisis talks

As McLaren celebrated their third win from four in Sakhir, Red Bull convened a 'crisis' meeting involving their top brass.

Team principal Christian Horner, influential advisor Helmut Marko, technical director Pierre Wache, and chief engineer Paul Monaghan met to mull over the team's plight.

Horner, in a post-race media encounter in Red Bull's hospitality tent, had offered a blunt appraisal of where they were at.

"This race has exposed some pitfalls that are obviously very clear that we need to get on top of very quickly.

"Ultimately you can mask it a little through set-up and we were able to achieve that last weekend in Suzuka. We understand where the issues are, it's introducing the solutions that obviously takes a little more time," he said.

Verstappen, who was plum last at one stage at the Bahrain Grand Prix, lamented that "basically everything went wrong".

"It's of course not what we want, but it's just where we are at with our car and the tyre behaviour that we have with the car.

"Everything is just highlighted even more on a track like this," added the Dutchman.

One-man band

Red Bull would be in even worse shape if it wasn't for Verstappen's combative brilliance in cajoling a problematic car to fight with quicker rivals like McLaren and Mercedes.

His win in Japan in the first leg of this month's triple header was only down to arguably his greatest ever qualifying performance.

The machine's idiosyncracies proved too tough a riddle to solve for the unfortunate Liam Lawson, who was unceremoniously dropped to their sister team RB after just two races.

The Kiwi's successor Yuki Tsunoda finished out of the points in Suzuka before adding two from ninth place in Sakhir.

Without an effective 'wingman' to help him in races Verstappen is left to do it all on his own.

Exodus of talent

It can surely be no coincidence that Red Bull's malaise comes after some of their brightest brains have jumped ship.

The team were shocked when legendary design guru Adrian Newey, at the heart of developing cars that won seven drivers' and six constructors' championships, quit to join Aston Martin.

Another huge loss was the departure of sporting director Jonathan Wheatley, who took up his new role as Sauber team principal this month.

Red Bull's head of race strategy Will Courtenay also left, for McLaren, where former chief designer Rob Marshall had moved to in 2023.

Max's future?

Verstappen, who has been with the Red Bull family since 2015, has a deal running until 2028.

In an interview with AFP in Mexico last October he said it was "definitely" his intention to see out his time at Red Bull, despite the tension surrounding Horner last season after he was accused of inappropriate conduct towards a woman colleague.

Horner was cleared of any wrongdoing ahead of the 2024 season-opener but the off-track scandal rumbled on for weeks.

Yet on Monday, Marko dropped a bombshell, telling Sky Germany he has "great concern" that unless Red Bull up their game, Verstappen could up sticks.

"The concern is great. Improvements have to come in the near future so that he has a car with which he can win again," Marko warned.

"We have to create a basis with a car so that he can fight for the world championship."

Q.Fiala--TPP