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

How Armstrong has proven he belongs in the WRC's top tier

WRC
Rally Croatia
How Armstrong has proven he belongs in the WRC's top tier

The top 11 lost F1 victories after the flag

Feature
Formula 1
The top 11 lost F1 victories after the flag

Racing Bulls suggest "continuous" roll-out of F1 2026 regulation tweaks

Formula 1
Racing Bulls suggest "continuous" roll-out of F1 2026 regulation tweaks

Special Alpine and victorious Vectra among Cadwell Park BARC highlights

National
Special Alpine and victorious Vectra among Cadwell Park BARC highlights

Forthcoming KTM switch not impacting Marquez's involvement in GP26 development

MotoGP
Forthcoming KTM switch not impacting Marquez's involvement in GP26 development

Domenicali responds to Verstappen's criticism of F1 2026: “His voice has to be listened to”

Formula 1
Domenicali responds to Verstappen's criticism of F1 2026: “His voice has to be listened to”

F1 boss issues verdict on start of 2026 season, backs potential changes

Formula 1
F1 boss issues verdict on start of 2026 season, backs potential changes

Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

General
Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

Tsunoda has “no idea what happened” after Q1 exit at Qatar GP qualifying

Outqualifying Max Verstappen was a short-lived highlight for Yuki Tsunoda as his Red Bull future looks gloomier than ever

Yuki Tsunoda, Red Bull Racing

In Friday’s sprint qualifying at the Qatar Grand Prix, Yuki Tsunoda ended Max Verstappen’s 37-strong unbeaten streak in Formula 1 qualifying against his successive team-mates.

Tsunoda looked rejuvenated, hailing a “clean” and “smooth” weekend thus far and rejoicing that he found “more confidence” in his Red Bull car, which had led to that season high in qualifying – fifth place.

Twenty-four hours later, Tsunoda recorded his 10th Q1 exit out of 26 sessions since joining Red Bull, and the Japanese is baffled as to how such a downturn in form even occurred.

“I have no idea what happened because the lap was pretty tidy,” he said. “Similar to what I had even yesterday [when it was enough for] P5. The car was pretty much the same. We changed one thing but it shouldn't affect that much. Yeah, I have no idea. Suddenly I lost the grip or pace.”

Yuki Tsunoda, Red Bull Racing

Yuki Tsunoda, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Guido De Bortoli / LAT Images via Getty Images

Tsunoda insisted he had made “no errors” and his lack of performance was “strange”, as he was three tenths down on Verstappen; he even branded his lap “pretty good”.

With a mandatory two-stop strategy in the race due to concerns over tyre wear, Tsunoda knows he won’t be able to recover many positions tactically, while the Losail track is notoriously difficult to overtake on, so he will instead focus on taking the best possible start.

He will need it, as he is set to lose his Red Bull drive and is understood to be fighting Liam Lawson for the second Racing Bulls seat alongside incoming rookie Arvid Lindblad for the 2026 campaign – meaning his F1 career is at risk.

Asked if he could do something on Sunday to change the situation or if it was already decided, Tsunoda retorted: “I mean, I know you guys want a twist and everything, but it's not decided yet.”

A top-seven finish could at least vault him ahead of Lawson in the drivers’ standings, with the New Zealander leading him by 36 points to 32.

Read Also:
Previous article What we learned from the 2025 F1 Qatar GP sprint race and qualifying
Next article Verstappen counters Norris ‘nonsense’ remark: “I'm just putting all facts on the table”

Top Comments

Latest news