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Zak Brown Shares How Deep Talks Went on Max Verstappen’s Shocking McLaren Move

Highlights
- McLaren CEO Zak Brown denied talks with Verstappen happened.
- Rumors of Verstappen joining McLaren for 2027 season circulated.
- Brown confirmed McLaren is happy with Norris and Piastri drivers.
- Verstappen declined to comment on transfer rumors at Silverstone.
- Verstappen holds a contract clause allowing early Red Bull exit.
- McLaren focuses on stability for its 2026 racing campaign.
McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown dismisses speculation linking Max Verstappen to the team, saying talks ‘didn’t go anywhere’ during media duties at Silverstone before the 2026 British Grand Prix.
Reports suggested Verstappen’s camp explored a 2027 switch after the Austrian Grand Prix. The rumour cycle intensified as questions mounted over his long‑term future at Red Bull.
Verstappen sits seventh in the 2026 standings on 73 points. He is contracted to Red Bull until 2028, but a performance‑related clause is widely believed to allow an early exit.

Brown mixed firmness with humour. ‘If someone slipped on a banana peel getting out of the tub, then yeah, Max is a four‑time world champion,’ he joked.
The message was clear. McLaren is committed to continuity with Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri for 2026 and beyond, prioritising stability amid the new power unit and chassis regulations. That confidence in Norris and Piastri frames the team’s approach.
Asked directly if conversations took place, Brown replied, “No conversations,” shutting down the narrative during the FIA team representatives’ briefing at Silverstone.
He lightened the tone by mentioning a recent dinner with Nigel Mansell, a driver he has long admired.

Pressed on whether a future move could materialise, Brown answered, ‘Correct,’ indicating it is not on McLaren’s horizon.
Verstappen declined to fuel the story. He said he would not involve himself in the speculation and would address any real development directly if it arose.
The backdrop is the driver‑market chessboard. Contract mechanisms at Red Bull could still reshape options, even if unlikely now, as outlined in ongoing coverage of potential driver switches.
From a competitive standpoint, McLaren’s stance protects a well‑balanced line‑up and preserves development focus. That continuity supports integration of the new 2026 package and operational gains seen this season.
Should Verstappen become available later, multiple teams would reassess plans. For now, Brown’s position aligns with previous briefings on the topic and cools the immediate rumour cycle.
Visual Summary
McLaren Drivers
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Zak Brown firmly SHUTS the door 🚪
“No conversations. We have two awesome drivers. The rumors didn’t go anywhere.”
– Zak Brown

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.






