Formula 1 Racing

Verstappen explains “spicy” slide towards the wall in Abu Dhabi GP qualifying

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB20, Carlos Sainz, Ferrari SF-24

Max Verstappen feared his huge slide out of the final corner in qualifying for the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix was going to be “quite spicy” while he faced the wall, with his slip-up a symptom of a difficult-to-tame Red Bull Formula 1 car.

In the face of McLaren’s expected dominance, Verstappen looked set to mount a solid challenge by being the only driver to save two brand-new sets of soft tyres for the deciding Q3 shootout.

But his first Q3 lap provided a jaw-clenching example of his RB20 mimicking a bucking bronco over one lap, with Verstappen suffering a huge 45-degree slide out of the final corner that pitted him towards the inside wall.

Verstappen managed to save the car and, despite the incident, his 1m22.045s was good for provisional pole ahead of the McLarens of Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri.

But while both McLarens bolted on fresh tyres to take a commanding front-row lock-out, Verstappen failed to improve on his second set as he continued to struggle with balance issues.

That punted the four-time world champion down to fifth, behind the Ferrari of Carlos Sainz and the outstanding Nico Hulkenberg in the Haas, before the German received a three-place grid drop for overtaking on pit exit that moves Verstappen up to fourth.

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB20, Carlos Sainz, Ferrari SF-24

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

Asked by Motorsport.com about his huge save coming onto the start-finish straight, Verstappen said: “When I was facing towards the wall I was like ‘this could be quite spicy’, but it was not quick.

“I think the whole weekend we’ve not found the sweet spot, unfortunately. Maybe we looked okay in Q1 and Q2 but most of the time people were aborting their laps on new tyres and then every time in the beginning of the session people behind me were on scrubbed tyres and not new.

“Then in Q3 it was OK but just not how I liked it, the car was never really planted, it was difficult in some corners and it made it very difficult to be consistent.

“It happened in many different corners, because if you try to adjust one or two and then something else happened in another corner.

“The balance shift that we get throughout the corner at some tracks is a bit more limiting than at others. [For the second run] I adjusted the front wing a bit and everything was made worse.”

Verstappen says the balance problems prevented him from potentially splitting the McLarens at the front, with Norris leading…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Motorsport.com – Formula 1 – Stories…