Max Verstappen has doubled down on his criticism of George Russell following their altercation after Qatar Grand Prix qualifying.
Verstappen and Russell generally enjoyed cordial relations thus far, but that changed at the Qatar Grand Prix when Verstappen felt Russell was trying to stitch him up in front of the FIA race stewards and land the Dutchman a penalty for impeding him while on a warm-up lap during Saturday’s qualifying session.
Verstappen ended up with a one-place penalty, which saw him lose his pole for the grand prix to the Mercedes driver. But he then retaliated on Sunday by making a better start than Russell and taking the lead, before going on to claim his ninth grand prix victory of the season.
Afterwards Verstappen said he had lost all respect for Russell for the way he was actively trying to get the Dutchman in trouble, with his team boss Christian Horner labelling Russell as “quite hysterical” over the Qatar issue.
Asked in Abu Dhabi if tension had cooled and Verstappen thought any differently about his row with Russell, the four-time world champion instead doubled down on his criticism.
“No, no regrets at all, because I meant everything I said and it’s still the same,” Verstappen said on Thursday. “If I had to do it again, maybe I would have said even more, knowing the outcome of the race result.
“I still can’t believe that someone can be like that in the stewards room. For me, that was so unacceptable, because we’re all racing drivers. We all have a lot of respect for each other. We even play sports together, you travel together.
“And of course, you have moments where you get together, you crash, or whatever, you’re not happy. In my whole career, I’ve never experienced what I have experienced in the stewards’ room in Qatar. And for me, that was really unacceptable.”
Pole man Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, George Russell, Mercedes-AMG F1 Team, talk in Parc Ferme
Photo by: Dom Romney / Motorsport Images
Verstappen claimed Russell was “lying” to the stewards about what he was doing on the outlap, with the Dutchman explaining he was just trying to stay out of trouble now he already has the world championship in the bag at the end of a long season.
“It’s nothing to do with him being the director of the GPDA,” he said. “I just never expected someone to really try and actively get someone a penalty that badly and lying about why I was doing what I was doing. But clearly it had an…
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