Motor racing-Verstappen happy to be on podium again but rails against F1 rules


Formula One F1 - Canadian Grand Prix - Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, Montreal, Quebec, Canada - May 24, 2026 Red Bull's Max Verstappen celebrates on the podium with a trophy after finishing third place in the Canadian Grand Prix REUTERS/Mathieu Belanger

MONTREAL, May 24 (Reuters) - Max Verstappen ⁠returned to the Formula One podium for the first time this ⁠season on Sunday but the Red Bull driver, third in Canada, ‌left no doubt about his unhappiness with new rules he considers to be anti-racing.

The four times world champion, 28, had said on Saturday it would not be "mentally doable"for him to continue beyond ​this season if the sport backtracked on agreed ⁠rule changes for 2027.

The latest ⁠hybrid power units are now split roughly 50-50 between combustion power and electric but ⁠the ‌changes would make that more like 60-40, allowing for more flat-out racing and less energy management.

Verstappen, who has been one of the ⁠foremost critics of the existing rules, told Sky Sports ​television that the tweak ‌would be "the very minimum" acceptable.

"The thing is of course I know how ⁠pure other motorsports ​can feel like," said the Dutch driver, who competed in the Nuerburgring 24 Hours endurance race in between races in Miami and Canada.

"So then when you come back ⁠to this, it's just not very nice.

"I don't ​want to be too negative now after a race like this but I know what it feels like to drive pure racing cars and pure overtakes, pure ⁠racing and just natural driving. This is all, especially qualifying, very anti-driving, anti-racing.

"And that's not what Formula One should be about."

Verstappen said a 60-40 split would naturally help the situation.

On Thursday he had told reporters the agreed 60-40 changes ​would boost his chances of staying in the sport.

"I ⁠always wanted to continue anyway, but I always wanted to see change. And ​I think the change that's coming now is ‌definitely very, very positive — or at least, ​almost back to normal," he said then, before reports of some manufacturers having doubts.

(Writing by Alan Baldwin in London; Editing by Stephen Coates)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Others Also Read