Red Bull team principal Christian Horner gave his backing to Max Verstappen following his controversial clash with McLaren's Lando Norris at the Austrian Grand Prix; watch every session of this weekend's British Grand Prix live on Sky Sports F1 and Sky Showcase
Wednesday 3 July 2024 06:31, UK
Christian Horner insists Max Verstappen will not be changing after again defending his driver following his clash with Lando Norris at last weekend’s Austrian Grand Prix.
The reigning world champion was handed a 10-second penalty for the incident on lap 64 with the pair fighting for the lead which resulted in them colliding and allowed Mercedes' George Russell to sweep through for victory.
Speaking at Red Bull Racing headquarters in Milton Keynes ahead of this weekend's British Grand Prix, team principal Horner backed Verstappen's approach and expects more close racing between him and McLaren rival Norris.
"I understand they've spoken already, I don't think there is any issue," Horner told Sky Sports News. "Certainly, from Max's side, he's not going to change.
"There's an element, I think, of Lando learning how to race Max and they're discovering that. Inevitably, there is going to be more close racing between the two of them as the cars look so close over the forthcoming races.
"Max is a hard racer - he's probably one of the hardest racers on the circuit and everybody knows that if you're going to race against Max, he's going to give as good as he gets."
Verstappen eventually finished fifth in Austria, although the clash brought an end to Norris' race and McLaren team principal Andrea Stella was among those to fiercely criticise the Dutchman amid the fall-out at the Red Bull Ring.
However, Horner refuted Stella's assertion that it was a direct result of Verstappen not being punished for incidents when he and Lewis Hamilton were fighting it out for the world title three years ago.
"He raced incredibly hard in 2021, he's a tough racer, and he hasn't really been racing anyone for two years because he's been out front so much," Horner said.
"The conflict between the two of them has been building over two, three, four races where they've been racing each other closely and hard, and at some point that was always going to spill over - and it did at Turn 3.
"He was punished in 2021 if he did something wrong just as Lewis, who he was racing so hard that year, was for things he did wrong.
"I think it's wrong and unfair to label a driver like that and I'm sure in the heat of the moment it was frustrating for Andrea, but that's just tough racing. He worked with Michael Schumacher [at Ferrari] for so many years - he of all people should know that."
As one of three British drivers on the grid, Norris will likely have sizeable support at Silverstone when Formula 1 rolls into the Northamptonshire circuit for the British Grand Prix this weekend.
Horner is not concerned about the possibility of Verstappen facing a hostile reception though.
"I'm sure it's going to be a partisan crowd for the British drivers as it is for Max in Holland, but I think whenever we go to those tracks there is always respect for the other drivers," Horner said.
"I hope Max gets a reasonable reception and I'm sure it's going to be all orange again this weekend - perhaps not Max Verstappen fans, more McLaren fans.
"That'll be water off a duck's back to him, he'll have his head down and he won't change. He's the racer he is and I'm sure he'll race just as hard this weekend."
Earlier this year, Red Bull announced they were entering into a technical partnership with Ford for the 2026 season and beyond.
Speaking of the blossoming relationship, Horner said: "They've been a great partner.
"They haven't dictated or stipulated anything upon us. They've said, 'here's our sweet shop - our facilities, our resources - what can we help you with?'
"That's been hugely beneficial, particularly as we were getting up to speed with facilities and resource.
"It's such an iconic brand in Formula 1 to be bringing that blue oval back in 2026, on a Red Bull Powertrain, is really exciting."
F1's summer triple-header concludes with the big one, the British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Watch every session live on Sky Sports F1 and Sky Showcase, with Sunday's race at 3pm. Stream every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership - No contract, cancel anytime