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‘Very very poor’ – British GP Delivers Brutal Wake-Up Call for Red Bull

Highlights
- Isack Hadjar outqualified Verstappen by 0.147 seconds at Silverstone
- Both Red Bull drivers significantly behind Mercedes and Ferrari qualifiers
- Verstappen cited power loss and balance issues on long straights
- Verstappen dropped from second in Austria sprint to sixth in Silverstone
- Hadjar rated fifth as best possible finish despite pace deficits
- Red Bull’s 2026 car still struggles on high-speed, tricky circuits
Silverstone delivers a reality check for Red Bull after Austria’s optimism, exposing qualifying and sprint weaknesses with implications for its 2026 project.
The British GP weekend underscores how narrow the car’s operating window remains, especially on high-speed circuits with long straights and sustained lateral load.
Isack Hadjar outqualifies Max Verstappen by 0.147s in qualifying, a rare intra-team outcome highlighted by the ongoing qualifying investigation into performance trends.

Even so, both lag the front. Hadjar sits 0.635s off pole, while Verstappen is nearly eight‑tenths back, his largest deficit since Suzuka against the benchmark.
Verstappen labels the pace “very, very poor,” citing a power shortfall on his garage side and balance limitations that blunt straight‑line speed at power‑sensitive Silverstone.
He explains the shortfall forces heavier battery deployment, leaving the car exposed late in the lap and masking any set‑up gains from Friday to qualifying.
Multiple set‑up directions fail to move the needle, reinforcing that the limitation is primarily power and deployment, not a recoverable balance window.
The sprint race continues the trend. After second in Austria, Verstappen finishes sixth here, losing ground in both high‑ and low‑speed phases of the lap during the sprint race.
He reports struggling in George Russell’s dirty air, underlining Red Bull’s current aerodynamic sensitivity and the car’s reduced corner‑entry confidence.
Looking to Spa, Verstappen anticipates little relief, calling the circuit “not a lot of fun” for this package given its long straights and sustained full‑throttle sections.
Hadjar shares the diagnosis but is marginally upbeat, judging fifth as the ceiling in current trim. He notes improved power deployment from recent updates, yet outright pace still lacks everywhere.
Collectively, Silverstone serves as a Silverstone warning: Red Bull’s 2026 package trails Mercedes and Ferrari on high‑speed, long‑straight venues with tricky sequencing.
Closing that gap now hinges on execution and development rate. With Spa‑Francorchamps next, the drivers and team must stabilise deployment and aero efficiency to protect race‑day opportunity.
Visual Summary
Mercedes & Ferrari
⛰️🏁
↑
by 0.147s
↓
+0.8s off pole
⇩
struggles for speed
& balance on long straights
Title Hopes
Fading⏳

Daniel Miller reports on Formula 1 Grand Prix weekends with race-day analysis, team-radio highlights, and point-standings updates. He explains power-unit upgrades, aerodynamic developments, and driver rivalries in straightforward, SEO-friendly language for a global F1 audience.






