Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

Marshall lays down the Porsche Sprint Challenge law with Oulton Park treble

National
Marshall lays down the Porsche Sprint Challenge law with Oulton Park treble

What we learned from MotoGP’s unusual Hungarian GP

MotoGP
Hungarian GP
What we learned from MotoGP’s unusual Hungarian GP

Monaco Grand Prix Driver Ratings 2026

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Monaco Grand Prix Driver Ratings 2026

What could drive McLaren to build its own F1 engine

Feature
Formula 1
Monaco GP
What could drive McLaren to build its own F1 engine

Hamilton details ADUO order as Mercedes and Ferrari get F1 engine help

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Hamilton details ADUO order as Mercedes and Ferrari get F1 engine help

No more naysayers, surely? How Monaco proved Antonelli's searing form wasn't just luck

Feature
Formula 1
Monaco GP
No more naysayers, surely? How Monaco proved Antonelli's searing form wasn't just luck

Alpine requests right of review with FIA over penalties which cost Monaco GP podium

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Alpine requests right of review with FIA over penalties which cost Monaco GP podium

Le Mans 24 Hours: Aston Martin fastest at test day

WEC
24 Hours of Le Mans
Le Mans 24 Hours: Aston Martin fastest at test day

Stella: Red Bull claims to create “miracles” with Verstappen's F1 displays

Max Verstappen will start on pole position for Sunday’s Miami Grand Prix, but McLaren team boss Andrea Stella does not buy into the idea that Red Bull is a complete underdog

Andrea Stella, Team Principal, McLaren F1 Team

Andrea Stella, Team Principal, McLaren F1 Team

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella believes Formula 1 rival Red Bull is inventing a “narrative” that suggests it is achieving miracles just by competing for pole positions and wins this season. 

Max Verstappen sealed his third pole of 2025 for Sunday’s Miami Grand Prix and will be aiming to convert it into a second victory of the campaign to remain in the fight for a fifth consecutive drivers’ title.

The Dutchman has been able to keep the McLaren duo of Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri honest so far, despite widespread acknowledgement that the reigning champions have the fastest car on the grid.

But for Stella, the suggestion that Red Bull is severely lagging behind in the battle at the front is something it is happy to play in to.

“Red Bull, they are very good at making fast cars, they are very exceptionally good I would say at driving fast cars and they are extremely good also in creating the narrative to their advantage,” he said.

“They exploit every possible opportunity to stay in the competition and some of these opportunities sometimes is to create the narrative like: 'oh we are making miracles here, the others should win every single practice session and qualifying and race'.

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Alexander Trienitz

“But this is the narrative created by some of our competitors which we read occasionally and then we change the page, and we focus on ourselves and when we focus on ourselves we look at the numbers, we look at the facts, we look at what we should be improving and there's a lot that we should be improving.

“So for me when I look at the facts. I also look at what Lando and Oscar deliver and deliver quite consistently, so yeah, well done to Red Bull even in terms of the way they manage their non-technical opportunities.”

Norris will start alongside Verstappen on the front row in Miami and, when asked by Autosport in the post-qualifying press conference if his rival was getting more out of the Red Bull than he and Piastri in the superior McLaren, Norris replied: “It is impossible to know what car he's got compared to us. The advantage we have is two quick drivers and they don't.

“We have a car that's capable of allowing drivers to drive quicker but impossible to know, impossible to actually know the difference between the two cars.”

Read Also:
Previous article How Verstappen recovered from Miami GP qualifying mis-step to claim pole
Next article What we learned from the 2025 F1 Miami GP sprint race and qualifying

Top Comments

Latest news