Mexico city, Max Verstappen
Digest more
Max Verstappen refutes claims that Red Bull performs better than McLaren at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, saying that Red Bull was "not good here last year." The four-time world champion was named as the favourite for qualifying and for the victory heading into the Mexican Grand Prix,
Max Verstappen says he does not have the pace to fight for higher than fifth in the Mexico City Grand Prix and needs to stay out of trouble in Sunday’s race.Red Bull came into the Mexico weekend in strong form,
6hon MSN
Verstappen and Piastri Faced Different Frustrations as Norris Aced Them in Mexico City F1 Qualifying
When Lando Norris needed an advantage the most, his WDC competitors, Max Verstappen and Oscar Piastri, struggled in qualifying, suffering from different woes.
Max Verstappen's championship charge hit a speed bump at the Mexico City Grand Prix on Saturday as he qualified fifth and admitted his Red Bull had been "very difficult" to handle.
Red Bull’s Max Verstappen is chasing McLaren’s Oscar Piastri and Norris for the title, and he will start P5. As for the championship leader, Piastri could only manage to qualifying P8. Here is how we’re expecting the grid to line up for tomorrow’s race — taking into account Carlos Sainz’s five-place grid penalty from Austin.
Lando Norris enjoyed a clear advantage in FP3 at the Mexico City Grand Prix while Max Verstappen and title leader Oscar Piastri struggled for pace.
Piastri, who has a 14-point lead over McLaren teammate Lando Norris and 40 points ahead of Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, has endured a poor run of form and Saturday at the Mexico GP was no different. Piastri could only qualify eighth fastest in the final top-10 shootout, though will start seventh due to Carlos Sainz’s five-place grid penalty.
PlanetF1 on MSN
Max Verstappen admits he’s ‘not going to win’ after ‘big concern’ in Mexican GP practice
The first officer of a United Express flight that ran off the end of a wet runway in Roanoke, Virginia last month tried to get the captain to abort the landing twice, investigators say. The new findings are part of a preliminary report on the September 24 incident, just published by the National Transportation Safety Board.