Is Ferrari ready for Max Verstappen?

By Trent Price / Roar Guru

Racing drivers, as a requirement, must be equipped with a certain degree of tenacity and self-possession. Whether their cup floweth over in this department or is merely undervalued by half its potential is usually what separates the great from the very good.

Max Verstappen – according to most pundits with a polished cornea – falls into the former category.

Fresh onto the Formula One grid in 2015, it was glaringly obvious that Verstappen had talent to burn and wasn’t concerned about incinerating a few bridges along the way to prove it.

Under the spotlight of the world media in Montreal, Max came under fire from the press and veteran Felipe Massa for his accident at Monaco with the Brazilian. Felipe, thinking he’d shaken the 18-year old into stoic submission, was caught off guard when Verstappen fired back on full offensive.

Call it assurance or over-confidence, Max is no shrinking violet.

And he has no reason to be. Like Daniel Ricciardo, Verstappen is one of the rare breed of drivers that coax their car into a corner and have their exit already planned well before their opponent has hit the brake pedal.

Not only does this talent buy tenths over a lap, but it aggregates over a race distance, which is why Ferrari have made no secret he’s at the pointy-end of their future shopping list.

But perhaps Maranello should be more discreet in their advances, given the cracks that appeared in Verstappen’s seemingly immaculate veneer during last Sunday’s Australian Grand Prix.

Verstappen, fifth on the grid, began his race in impeccable fashion, holding off a poor-starting Hamilton during his opening stint. But mediocre strategy calls and a tardy pit-stop (the crew unprepared for an impetuous pit-entry by Max) curbed his momentum as Verstappen found himself staring at his team mate, Carlos Sainz’s gearbox in a battle for ninth behind the slower Renault of Jolyon Palmer.

“Can I try to get past?” screamed Verstappen; just one in a repertoire of maledictions throughout the race.

“Come on, we have to do something! It’s a joke.”

Sainz had just executed a text-book move on the Force India of Sergio Perez just a lap earlier and in doing so, allowed his teammateVerstappen to follow him through in pursuit of Palmer.

“Let me drive, this takes too long. He’s holding me up!”

In reality, it was Palmer who was holding up the pair of Toro Rosso’s, but Verstappen was having none of it. The expectations of the Formula One paddock appeared to have spawned a feverish anxiety in the young Belgian-Dane that until now, had lay dormant until the presumption of a Ferrari contract had been dangled over his nose-cone.

Compare this with Sebastian Vettel’s conduct during the season closer last year in Abu Dhabi. Despite enjoying a tacit number one status at Ferrari, the German pulled over to let teammate Kimi Raikkonen past in what he suspected to be shaping up as a team stratagem.

“I’m assuming that was in the game plan”, said Vettel coolly over the radio.

Nobody was going to ask Seb to step aside, but he took the initiative anyway. A team player. An antipodean figure to the one we were used to watching at Red Bull. You certainly wouldn’t see that kind of maturity at Mercedes, with histrionics between Hamilton and Rosberg always bubbling below the surface.

With Ferrari progressively shedding their ‘Italianisms’ and becoming a more measured, cosmopolitan team like we saw in the 2000’s, it mightn’t be an ideal time to have an impetuous Verstappen on the books.

I’m not Verstappen’s manager and I don’t know if a provisional contract has been drawn up between Max and Maranello, but the Verstappen we saw in Melbourne tends to suggest he thinks the contract is already set in stone. And having his father Jos, hanging around the Toro Rosso garage like the proverbial Damir Dokić can hardly be helping matters.

Jean-Eric Vergne lost his Toro Rosso drive when it became painfully evident to Red Bull that his temperament would not navigate the pointy-end of the Formula One grid and was promptly replaced by Verstappen’s current team mate, the unflappable Carlos Sainz.

Despite Verstappen stealing the headlines, there is very little to separate the pair, but Sainz always appears the most composed of the two. Something Verstappen would do well to take note of.

Sometimes there’s more to self-possession than just blind confidence.

The Crowd Says:

2016-03-29T11:06:14+00:00

usman

Guest


He isn't the next schumacher.. there's a guy called 'vettel' who is already the next schumacher!

2016-03-27T23:15:26+00:00

L J Wilson

Roar Rookie


He is without any doubt the next 'Micheal Schumacher', and he needs a solid team to bring him along.

2016-03-27T23:10:06+00:00

Theophilus

Guest


He is by-far the next "Schumacher" in near future. They should get him before others snag's him!

2016-03-24T12:08:16+00:00

anon

Guest


Verstappen is clearly quicker than Sainz. If Red Bull/Toro Rosso had to choose betwen Verstappen and Sainz they would take Max and it's not even close. What he's done as a 17 and 18 year old is simply incredible.

AUTHOR

2016-03-23T20:39:34+00:00

Trent Price

Roar Guru


That was the point of the article Arjen. Verstappen is definitely entering an awkward phase and Ferrari will be watching closely to see how he works through it. I'm a massive fan of his natural ability and would hate to see it go to waste.

2016-03-23T15:04:44+00:00

Robert

Guest


We can argue all day on his vocalization, however if we look at the facts.. Sainz could only keep up using DRS between pitstop 1 and 2. The actual speed difference between the two was probably around 0.2 seconds a lap (conservatively). Verstappen then lost 6 seconds due to an unprepared pit-crew. Had he not lost 6 seconds, he would have been back on track in front of Sainz. So I think the team is to blame first. What happend as a result is a very competitive driver feeling he is being held up vocalizing the thoughts. Based on the facts I think he was right, the manner in which he did may not be fitting though. At the same time, we all know Verstappen is better at overtaking then Sainz.

2016-03-23T12:37:48+00:00

Arjen

Guest


Last year everybody jumped on the bandwagon when it came to hyping max performance and now everybody is scrambling to beat him down over some comments he made on the radio. The way i see it is that he was incredibly disappointed by the fact that he could have ended up in the top 5 this race and external factors took that chance away. Even if carlos would have let him pass he would have reached max p7-p8. But, with 18 years, Max is still in his learning phase and last year he has shown us his steep learning curve in not repeating previous mistakes he made. You can argue to death over who's the best racer in toro rosso but only time will tell.

2016-03-23T05:08:18+00:00

anon

Guest


"Compare this with Sebastian Vettel’s conduct during the season closer last year in Abu Dhabi. Despite enjoying a tacit number one status at Ferrari, the German pulled over to let teammate Kimi Raikkonen past in what he suspected to be shaping up as a team stratagem." Not this again. Seems every time there's a German driver we have to hear this. Vettel has destroyed Raikkonen fair and square.

2016-03-23T03:08:35+00:00

Vissie

Guest


I didn't like Verstappen's comments over the radio re passing incident with Palmer. It smacked of a spoilt brat. It's a race young man. Sainz had just pulled off two overtaking moves that allowed Vestappen to follow in his wake and also pass. He should have shown a bit more humility. I understand its all in the heat of the moment, still don't like it though. Perhaps he could play tennis for Australia. Him and Nick would go great guns together...

AUTHOR

2016-03-22T22:54:10+00:00

Trent Price

Roar Guru


Belgian-Dutch. Typo.

2016-03-22T18:23:36+00:00

Toon

Guest


Belgian Dane??

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