Is Verstappen a victim of his own brilliance?

By Trent Price / Roar Guru

Windows of operation are curious things. As humans we are programmed to be habitual and unless consistently confronted with change, our ability to adapt when revision is required can be a slow process – even for whippersnappers like Max Verstappen.

If you’ve ever had the misfortune of driving a 900 Series Volvo, you’d understand the effort required is akin to delivering a newly purchased Goldfish home in a Sherman tank.

Suppose then – when having to appease your child’s grief by taking them go-karting – you’re now forced to recalibrate how you drive in a vehicle that requires about as much steering lock as Nicki Minaj does clothing.

In exaggerated terms, this is what Verstappen is now experiencing at Red Bull. He’ll work his way through it, but Monaco was probably the worst place to experiment.

Toro Rosso’s STR10 is by no means a bad car – in fact, it’s probably one of the best chassis on the grid – but compared to the RB12 I dare say there’s enough of a difference to scare a Ladybug nesting on Monaco’s swimming pool armco.

My friend Leanne Boon was photographing on the inside of that barrier and her nerves of steel produced a shot that spoke volumes about the way Verstappen hustles Formula One machinery. As if anticipating the front-end of the car to slide fractionally, Max compensates with a slightly aggressive steering input, only the RB12 complies a little too well.

Upon first inspection, it looks as though Verstappen is intentionally trying to drive through the barrier, but the car slides (albeit not quite enough), to a glancing blow rather than a massive impact. If Verstappen had been driving an STR10, I dare say he’d have made it through.

Unlike Daniel Ricciardo, Verstappen hasn’t had the benefit of a winter testing period to iron out the residual idiosyncrasies he developed while driving the Toro Rosso.

It wasn’t so evident at the slightly more expansive layout at Barcelona (where Verstappen took his first win), but was visible to see at Monaco with three incidents; locking up during practice and hitting the barriers at Massenet, his aforementioned indiscretion in Q1 and once again at Massenet during the race.

The last incident is telling. While on intermediates, the fine edge of the RB12 would have been slightly blunted, allowing Verstappen to revert back to his natural style. Verstappen was visibly the quickest in the changes condition.

An undaunted Verstappen simply powered through a hairy moment through the tunnel (where the moisture level would have changed considerably), but the change to slicks put him back to square one and he was caught out once again overdriving through Massenet.

Giancarlo Fisichella was always fantastic to watch in less than perfect machinery. His 2003 Brazil Grand Prix win for Jordan is testament to that, yet once placed in a truly competitive R25 alongside Fernando Alonso he struggled in comparison.

I don’t expect Verstappen to have the same dramas as Fisichella, but we’ll know for sure in September around the serpentine confines of Singapore’s Marina Bay.

The Crowd Says:

2016-06-05T13:24:22+00:00

Marc

Guest


No thanks, i really enjoyd this piece ot writing, more or less what i tought about Monaco wrapped in words. It was again amazing seeing Max at his best, and overtake 4 cars in a single lap! At Monaco! Yes he crashed, but he also produces a race like no other did. Daniel in the end is the one we talk about, but he did not overtake anyone without the help of the pitlane.. He is crying like a baby now, feeling the pressure from wonderboy. We all know how that ends up, with him leaving a world title team and Max winning it all. We have seen it before with another Aussie. Max will end a lot of carreers, now they have to show real talent :) We have some exciting new boys and girls waiting at the back of te garage :)

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T00:22:19+00:00

Trent Price

Roar Guru


Thanks Marc. I don't doubt his skills at all, which was the intention of the piece. I do think his muscle memory needs to adapt as much as the team needs to his style.

2016-06-04T15:35:57+00:00

Marc

Guest


Good writing, yes he needs to get settled with his new car. But i do not think you have to worry about him being able to make this RBR car work, he will. His driving style is something a team needs to get used to, as been sayd before by other real pundits, it is out of every league. You have seen it happening at TR, after getting used to Max his skills he was unbeaten by his fellow driver and could drive in midfield upper hand as easy as cake, finishing 4th as a midfield driver twice. Why doubt his skills after 2 races? He will manage to get this car work for him in like 3 or 4 races. No doubt.

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