Max Verstappen has written off his chances of winning the 2025 Formula 1 world title after his shock Q1 elimination at the Brazilian Grand Prix.
The Red Bull driver qualified 16th at Interlagos after consistently struggling to get on top of his RB21, simply lacking pure pace all around having also suffered an oversteer at Turn 9.
It continued a tough day for Verstappen who finished fourth in the sprint race, which meant his deficit to championship leader Lando Norris rose to 39 points after the McLaren driver won from pole.
Norris again took pole in grand prix qualifying at Interlagos, very much ending the momentum Verstappen briefly built by winning four races in five before Mexico last time out – a contest also won by the Briton from pole.
So although Verstappen acknowledged he was in the fight against the McLaren pair – Norris and Oscar Piastri – after winning the United States GP, the Dutchman thinks that’s no longer the case.
“I can forget about that,” said Verstappen, when asked about his thoughts on the championship.
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing
Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Sutton Images via Getty Images
It was an answer which prompted the reporter to ask “really?”, to which the four-time world champion said: “Yes, for sure.”
“Where we are starting, that is not going to work,” he added. “And with these kind of performances, I mean, forget about it.”
There were problems across the Red Bull garage in Sao Paulo, as Verstappen’s team-mate Yuki Tsunoda only qualified 19th, giving the team its first double Q1 exit since Japan in 2006.
“It was just bad,” Verstappen told Sky Sports F1. “I couldn’t push at all. The car was all over the place, sliding around a lot. So, yeah, I had to underdrive it a lot just to not have a moment and that, of course, doesn’t work in qualifying.
“It’s not what you want to see. The whole weekend has been already quite tough, but this is a bit unexpected I would say after changing quite a bit on the car. It was just not responding, I had no grip out there so I had to really massively underdrive it basically and it just didn’t work.”
Both Red Bull drivers struggled to identify the exact reason for their poor result, as Tsunoda denied it was down to Verstappen opting for a set-up that was similar to his team-mate.
Yuki Tsunoda, Red Bull Racing
Photo by: Zak Mauger / LAT Images via Getty Images
“We made a change in the sprint race, which gave us a good idea to make the car better, we thought,” said Tsunoda.
“I think a couple of things, he [Verstappen] also took the set-up that I was using. Now, I don’t want to blame my set-up, because I think the set-up was OK, the main thing is we didn’t make the tyre work.
“From our side of the garage, we were able to make a good amount of steps in terms of parts we changed since the sprint race, and I feel clearly better in the car.
“But another issue came out, which seems quite big, and it’s a shame that we weren’t able to maximise that opportunity.”
Photos from Sao Paulo GP – Sprint Race
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