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Unstoppable Verstappen vrooming towards greatness

October 09, 2022 17:40 IST

IMAGE: "The first is more emotional but the second is more beautiful," said Max Verstappen, who won the rain-hit Japanese Grand Prix by a massive 27 seconds. Photograph: Max Verstappen/Instagram

Max Verstappen won his first Formula One championship amid controversy last year and the second after confusion at the Japanese Grand Prix on Sunday but this time there was no argument about the outcome.

 

The 25-year-old Red Bull driver has enjoyed one of the most dominant seasons in the sport's history at Suzuka the scene of his 12th win in 18 races with four rounds still remaining.

"Max has been truly, truly dominant. That’s our 14th victory (of 2022), a record for us (in a single season), and the way he has driven since the first race," said Red Bull team boss Christian Horner.

"We came back from some difficulties in the first couple of races, but he and the team have just raised it to another level."

The Dutch driver's first title was marked by drama and acrimony as he fought a down-to-the wire, battle-of-the-generations duel with Mercedes' seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton.

That ended in one of the sport's greatest controversies, with a late change to the safety car procedures leading to a last lap overtake in Abu Dhabi.

"The first is more emotional but the second is more beautiful," said Verstappen, who won the rain-hit race by a massive 27 seconds.

 

IMAGE: Red Bull's Max Verstappen celebrates winning the Japanese Grand Prix race and the championship with his team at the Suzuka Circuit, Suzuka, Japan on Sunday. Verstappen suffered two retirements from the first three races but has otherwise finished all but two rounds in the top three. Photograph: Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters

Buoyed by his 2021 title win over the sport's most successful driver ever, Verstappen has shown metronomic consistency.

"Some of the drives have been just simply outstanding this year under enormous pressure," Horner told reporters after the Singapore Grand Prix.

"He's just constantly delivered."

Adrian Newey, Red Bull's technical head who has designed a string of title-winning cars for three teams in his decades in the sport, said Verstappen had been simply superb.

"In the traffic in Singapore he made a little mistake, but apart from that he’s made no mistakes and he’s always had the speed. He thoroughly deserves all the success he’s having this year," the Briton told Sky Sports television.

Verstappen suffered two retirements from the first three races but has otherwise finished all but two rounds in the top three.

He has had an impressive car, with Red Bull nailing the radical rules introduced this year, and has benefited from reliability woes, strategic missteps, and errors derailing Ferrari rival Charles Leclerc's title challenge.

 

IMAGE: Max Verstappen on the podium with second-placed Red Bull's Sergio Perez and third-placed Ferrari's Charles Leclerc. Photograph: Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters

The Dutch driver, whose experienced team mate Sergio Perez has won twice in 2022, also showed maturity and assurance in winning from 10th place on the starting grid in Hungary, 14th in Belgium and seventh in Italy.

There have been flashes of his old hot-headedness -- such as in Singapore where insufficient fuel in his Red Bull prevented him from fighting for pole and left him furious, or in Spain where he raged over the radio about a malfunction.

But the boy who made his F1 debut at the age of 17, guided to greatness by the firm hand of his father and former racer Jos, has grown into an unstoppable force.

His dominance has been reminiscent of Britain's Nigel Mansell and German greats Michael Schumacher and Sebastian Vettel.

Verstappen can still break the record of most wins in a season, shared by Schumacher and Vettel at 13.

"I know that it’s been a really special season," he said.

"I’m enjoying it a lot but I’ll probably enjoy more after the season, looking back at it."

Source: REUTERS
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