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

LIVE: F1 Miami Grand Prix updates - Race set to start dry conditions

Formula 1
Miami GP
LIVE: F1 Miami Grand Prix updates - Race set to start dry conditions

FIA president certain V8 engines to return to F1 by 2031

Formula 1
Miami GP
FIA president certain V8 engines to return to F1 by 2031

DS Penske puts in a strong showing in Formula E Berlin Race 2

Formula E
Berlin ePrix II
DS Penske puts in a strong showing in Formula E Berlin Race 2

Formula E Berlin E-Prix: Evans battles to remarkable Race 2 win from 17th

Formula E
Berlin ePrix II
Formula E Berlin E-Prix: Evans battles to remarkable Race 2 win from 17th

What F1 stands to gain from a wet Miami GP

Formula 1
Miami GP
What F1 stands to gain from a wet Miami GP

Hadjar officially disqualified from F1 Miami GP qualifying

Formula 1
Miami GP
Hadjar officially disqualified from F1 Miami GP qualifying

Great debate: Will Verstappen quit F1 and should F1 care?

Feature
Formula 1
Great debate: Will Verstappen quit F1 and should F1 care?

How Antonelli restored Mercedes order in F1 Miami GP qualifying

Feature
Formula 1
Miami GP
How Antonelli restored Mercedes order in F1 Miami GP qualifying

Verstappen: F1 rule changes for Miami GP are "just a tickle"

Max Verstappen believes the tweaks to the F1 regulations will not make a major difference, but he does see them as a “positive starting point” in giving drivers more of a voice

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Max Verstappen has described the Formula 1 regulation changes as “just a tickle” in terms of the impact it will have, but sees the greater communication and interaction between the drivers and rules makers as a positive development.

The FIA and F1 used the April break, as planned, to review the technical regulations. The consensus was that the racing itself is ‘entertaining’ and does not require a ‘knee-jerk reaction’, although an attempt has been made to address some of the main concerns — particularly qualifying and the closing speeds.

Read Also:

The FIA has already indicated that these adjustments will not fundamentally change the overall picture, and that is exactly what Verstappen expects as well.

“With the changes that are made, I think it's more like a tickle,” the Red Bull driver said during F1’s media day in Miami. “Because at the end of the day, F1 is a very complex and political sport. I think everyone has tried their best to at least do something, but of course it won't change the world.”

The same applies to qualifying. Lowering the harvesting limit and increasing the level of super clipping to the full 350 kilowatts should ensure that drivers are less focused on energy management, but based on his initial simulator running, Verstappen doesn’t expect this weekend's qualifying laps to be on the very limit.

“[This] is not what we need yet to really make it flat out,” he said. “But like I said, it's complicated to get everyone to agree. I just hope for next year we can make really big, big changes.”

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Alastair Staley / LAT Images via Getty Images

According to Verstappen, the biggest gain lies in the fact that drivers now have a seat at the table. The four-time world champion has held several meetings with F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali and is also speaking with the FIA behind the scenes about what he believes is needed.

“The positive thing about it is that we’ve had some nice meetings with Formula 1 and the FIA. And I think that's hopefully a starting point for the future. Even in a few years’ time, maybe I'm not here anymore, but I really hope that for the future drivers as well, there's more input to come from the drivers to the organisers in general,” the Dutchman said.

“Because I do think that most of the drivers here, we have a good understanding and a good feel of what is needed to make Formula 1 a good product, a fun product. And I think that's already a huge step forward in terms of the communication.”

Regarding that product, Domenicali has stated that F1 is “in a good place” and that there are essentially no problems. Verstappen understands that point of view, but indicates that it is mainly commercially driven.

“I only speak about the purity of the sport, what we need, and for the drivers as well, what we feel in the car. But you have to understand that it's a business, it's a sport. And that's, like I said, why it can be political at times.”

In conclusion, Verstappen hopes that lessons will be learned from the current situation, as in his view the issues could have been prevented with more input from the drivers: “I hope [they’ll listen to the drivers] more and more. I'm sure that we can have really good input about that.

“I think if we would have had that five or six years ago, then we probably wouldn't have been in the state that we are in now. I just hope that it's a lesson for the future.”

Read Also:
Previous article Honda details "countermeasures" for Miami GP after horror start to F1 2026 with Aston Martin
Next article Hamilton wants "a seat at the table" for F1 drivers in rules talks - but is it viable?

Top Comments

Latest news