Christian Horner has insisted Sergio Perez is “old enough and wise enough to know what the situation is” as Red Bull looks set to end the partnership after the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.
The Mexican will finish only eighth in the drivers’ standings despite team-mate Max Verstappen winning his fourth title, with Perez’s shortcomings largely to blame for the team’s inability to keep McLaren and Ferrari at bay.
It is understood that Red Bull’s shareholders will meet on the Monday after the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix to firm up the team’s driver plans for 2025.
And while the team is publicly saying little about Perez’s future, it is understood that the plan is for it to replace the Mexican next year with one of the current RB duo.
What still needs to be sorted out though is the terms of their partnership ending, with him having originally signed a contract – albeit with break clauses – into next year.
In terms of potential replacements, Liam Lawson remains favourite to be given the nod, but Yuki Tsunoda could yet get himself in the frame if he impresses in a Red Bull test he has in Abu Dhabi on the Tuesday after the season finale.
Speaking to ViaPlay on Sunday, Red Bull motorsport advisor Helmut Marko said things will become clear next week.
“There is a meeting Monday after Abu Dhabi,” he said. “All the major people are there, all of the shareholders, and there a decision will be done.
“We always – or most of the time – brought our own drivers through the Red Bull programme and I think it’s a philosophical decision: do we stick to that? And what I got from the shareholders is it will be in this direction.”
After a number of underwhelming qualifying results, the Qatar Grand Prix weekend again proved challenging for Perez, failing to reach SQ2 on Friday before blowing his pitlane start when failing to acknowledge the green light in the sprint race.
Having run in the points in the grand prix, Perez spun behind the safety car before his car ground to a halt, ending his day prematurely.
On the issue that saw his race finish, Horner explained: “We’re just investigating the exact failure but it looks like, obviously he’s spun the car and as he dropped the clutch, the clutch had too much temperature go through it. So yes, one of those things. But more to come after we’ve stripped the car.”
Pointing to his errors across the weekend, Horner added: “We sent him to the end of the pit lane seven minutes ahead of Colapinto for a…
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