Max Verstappen

Max Emilian Verstappen (Dutch pronunciation: [mɑks eːˈmilijɑn vɛrˈstɑpə(n)]; born 30 September 1997) is a Belgian-Dutch[2] racing driver who competes under the Dutch flag in Formula One with Red Bull Racing. At the 2015 Australian Grand Prix, when he was aged 17 years, 166 days, he became the youngest driver to compete in Formula One. He holds eight other "firsts" in Formula One racing.

Max Verstappen
Verstappen at the 2017 Malaysian Grand Prix
BornMax Emilian Verstappen
(1997-09-30) 30 September 1997
Hasselt, Belgium
Formula One World Championship career
Nationality Dutch
2020 teamRed Bull Racing-Honda[1]
Car number33
Entries102 (102 starts)
Championships0
Wins8
Podiums31
Career points948
Pole positions2
Fastest laps7
First entry2015 Australian Grand Prix
First win2016 Spanish Grand Prix
Last win2019 Brazilian Grand Prix
Last entry2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix
2019 position3rd (278 pts)
Previous series
2014European Formula 3 Championship
Awards
  • 2014, 2015, 2016, 2019
  • 2015, 2016, 2017
  • 2015
  • 2016

After spending the 2015 season with Scuderia Toro Rosso, he started his 2016 campaign with the Italian team before being promoted to parent team Red Bull Racing after four races as a replacement for Daniil Kvyat. At the age of 18, he won the 2016 Spanish Grand Prix on his debut for Red Bull Racing, becoming the youngest-ever driver and the first Dutch driver to win a Formula One Grand Prix.[3]

Over the course of the next three seasons he achieved another seven race victories, including the first for a Honda-powered car since 2006, and 2 pole positions. He finished the 2019 championship in third place, ahead of both Ferrari drivers. Verstappen is due to remain at Red Bull until the end of the 2023 season after signing a contract extension.[4]

He is the son of former Formula One driver Jos Verstappen.

Family and personal life

Max Emilian Verstappen was born on 30 September 1997 in Hasselt, Belgium.[5] His family has a long association with motor sports: his father, Jos Verstappen, is a Dutch former Formula One driver, his Belgian mother, Sophie Kumpen, competed in karting,[6][7] and his first cousin once removed, Anthony Kumpen, competed in endurance racing and is a two-time NASCAR Whelen Euro Series champion and currently serves as the team manager for PK Carsport in Euro Series.[6]

Although Verstappen has a Belgian mother, was born in Belgium and resided in Bree, Belgium, he decided to compete with a Dutch racing licence because he "feels more Dutch", spent more time with his father than with his mother owing to his karting activities, and was always surrounded by Dutch people while growing up in Maaseik, a Belgian town at the Dutch border.[7] He competed in Formula One for more than half a season before obtaining a road driver's licence on his 18th birthday.[8] Verstappen has lived in Monaco since October 2015, claiming it was not for tax reasons.[9] Verstappen does sim racing as a hobby. He won the Team Redline "2020 Real Racers Never Quit" championship that ran in the beginning of 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The series ran over multiple rounds on the racing simulator iRacing.[10] Verstappen teamed up with fellow current Formula One driver Lando Norris on 13-14 June 2020 as drivers for Team Redline at a virtual version of the 24 Hours of Le Mans run on rFactor 2.[11] In the race both Norris and Verstappen competed against fellow current and former Formula One drivers Fernando Alonso, Pierre Gasly, Juan Pablo Montoya, Charles Leclerc, Antonio Giovinazzi, Rubens Barrichello, Jan Magnussen, Jean-Éric Vergne, Stoffel Vandoorne and Jenson Button .[11][12]. Verstappen and Team Redline's hopes of a good result in the event were dashed by technical issues which caused Verstappen to crash out of the race lead.[13] This incident caused Verstappen to have an expletive laden rant.[14]

Early career

Karting

Verstappen began karting at age 4. He competed in the Mini Junior championship of his home province of Limburg (Belgium).[15] In 2006, Verstappen graduated to the Rotax Max Minimax class and won the Belgian championship.[16] In 2007, Verstappen won the Dutch Minimax championship.[17] Racing in a CRG kart entered by his father, Verstappen won the Dutch and Belgian Minimax championship as well as the Belgian Cadet championship.[18][19]

In 2009, Verstappen joined Team Pex Racing, a CRG customer team. That year, he won the Flemish Minimax championship and the Belgian KF5 championship.[20][21]

In 2010, Verstappen stepped up to international karting. He was signed by CRG to race in their factory team at world and European championships. At the KF3 World Cup, Verstappen finished second to the more experienced Alexander Albon (who would eventually become his Formula One teammate at Red Bull Racing)[22] but beat him at the WSK Euro Series and also won the WSK World Series, beating Robert Vișoiu.[23]

In 2011, Verstappen won the WSK Euro Series in a Parilla-powered CRG.[24] In 2012, Verstappen was picked for the Intrepid Driver Program to race in the KF2 and KZ2 classes. He won the WSK Master Series in the KF2 class, beating CRG driver Felice Tiene.[25] Verstappen won the South Garda Winter Cup in the KF2 class, beating Dennis Olsen and Antonio Fuoco.[26][27]

At the end of 2012, it was announced that Verstappen would leave Intrepid. After a short stint with CRG-built Zanardi karts, Verstappen returned to the factory CRG team.[28] He competed at the SKUSA SuperNationals in the KZ2 class in a CRG, finishing 21st. In 2013, Verstappen won the European KF and KZ championships. At the age of 15, Verstappen won the 2013 World KZ championship at Varennes-sur-Allier, France, in KZ1, the highest karting category.

Formula racing

Testing

Verstappen's first experience in a racing car was at the Pembrey Circuit on 11 October 2013. He drove 160 laps in a Barazi-Epsilon FR2.0–10 Formula Renault car. The car was provided by Dutch team Manor MP Motorsport.[29] He tested for several Formula Renault 2.0 teams in 2013.[30] In December 2013, Verstappen tested a Dallara F311 Formula 3 car run by Motopark Academy. Another Formula Renault test came in December at Circuito de Jerez. Driving for Josef Kaufmann Racing, Verstappen went faster than Formula Renault regulars like Steijn Schothorst and Matt Parry.[31] At the Circuit Ricardo Tormo near Valencia, Verstappen set a faster time than more experienced drivers including Tatiana Calderón and Eddie Cheever III.[32]

Florida Winter Series

On 16 January 2014, it was announced Verstappen would make his racing debut in the Florida Winter Series.[33]

On 5 February, at the second race weekend, Verstappen won his first formula race at Palm Beach International Raceway after he started from pole.[34]

On 19 February, Verstappen won his second race at Homestead–Miami Speedway after beating Nicholas Latifi by 0.004 seconds.[35]

Formula Three

Verstappen competing in the FIA European Formula Three Championship in 2014.

In 2014, Verstappen drove in the FIA European Formula 3 Championship for Van Amersfoort Racing.[36] He finished his maiden car racing season third, behind champion Esteban Ocon and runner-up Tom Blomqvist, winning 10 races in the process.

Formula One career

Scuderia Toro Rosso (2014–2016)

2014 season

In August 2014, Verstappen joined the Red Bull Junior Team after testing a Formula Renault 3.5 car. He also considered an offer from Mercedes to join their driver development programme.[37] Six days later, he was confirmed as one of Scuderia Toro Rosso's drivers for the 2015 season.[38] It was confirmed that Carlos Sainz Jr. would be Verstappen's teammate, following Daniil Kvyat's promotion to Red Bull Racing. Verstappen chose 33 as his race number.

By taking part in the first free practice at the 2014 Japanese Grand Prix, Verstappen became the youngest driver to take part in a Grand Prix weekend, as part of his preparation for a full-time place with Scuderia Toro Rosso in 2015.[39]

2015 season: Youngest full time driver

Verstappen driving for Toro Rosso at the 2015 Malaysian Grand Prix.

In January 2015, the FIA launched a new super licence system for Formula One, raising the age limit to 18 from the 2016 season onwards.[40] Verstappen became the youngest driver to start a World Championship race by joining the sport a year before this licence restriction, in his Grand Prix début as a full-time driver at the 2015 Australian Grand Prix at the age of 17 years, 166 days – breaking Jaime Alguersuari's existing record by almost two years.[41] In this first race, Verstappen ran in points-scoring positions until he was forced to retire due to an engine failure.[42] However, at the subsequent race in Malaysia, Verstappen qualified sixth and finished the race in seventh place, scoring his first Formula One points aged 17 years, 180 days, breaking the record of youngest driver to score World Championship points.[43] After that he then failed to finish with points in China, due to engine failure in the last lap, Bahrain, due to electrical issues, Spain, settling for 11th.

At the 2015 Monaco Grand Prix, Verstappen was involved in a high-speed collision with Romain Grosjean, after clipping the back of the Lotus on the approach to Sainte Devote and flew nose-first into the barriers at high speed.[44] Verstappen was given a five-place grid penalty for causing the accident, and was branded "dangerous" by Williams driver Felipe Massa – although Verstappen hit back at Massa by pointing out he had himself been involved in a similar incident with Sergio Pérez at the 2014 Canadian Grand Prix.[45]

Verstappen continued to regularly finish in the points as well as achieving his best finish of the 2015 season in Hungary by finishing 4th and equalled this result at the United States Grand Prix. At the end of the season, Verstappen received three awards at the FIA Prize Giving Ceremony, for Rookie of the Year, Personality of the Year and Action of the Year for his overtake on Felipe Nasr through the outside of the Blanchimont corner at the Belgian Grand Prix.[46]

2016 season

Verstappen at the 2016 Bahrain Grand Prix

Verstappen began the 2016 season at Toro Rosso, again alongside Sainz. Verstappen qualified fifth for the opening race of the season in Australia, but during the race made several radio calls to his team due to frustration at being behind Sainz on track before clipping his teammate whilst attempting to pass him with three laps to go, and he eventually finished tenth.[47] Verstappen enjoyed a more successful weekend at the following race in Bahrain, finishing sixth to score Toro Rosso's first ever points at the Sakhir circuit.[48]

Red Bull (2016–present)

Verstappen celebrating victory at the 2016 Spanish Grand Prix, in his first race for the Red Bull Racing team

2016 season: Youngest race winner

On 5 May 2016, following the Russian Grand Prix, Red Bull announced that Verstappen would be replacing Daniil Kvyat for the 2016 Spanish Grand Prix, with Kvyat returning to Toro Rosso. According to Red Bull Team Principal Christian Horner, "Max has proven to be an outstanding young talent. His performance at Toro Rosso has been impressive so far and we are pleased to give him the opportunity to drive for Red Bull Racing."[49] After qualifying fourth for the Spanish Grand Prix,[50] Verstappen rose to second behind teammate Daniel Ricciardo on the opening lap after Mercedes teammates Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg crashed out of the race. Verstappen took the race lead as he was placed on a two-stop rather than the same three-stop strategy as Ricciardo, and he held off Ferrari's Kimi Räikkönen in the later stages of the race to take his first Formula One victory. By doing so he displaced Sebastian Vettel as the youngest driver ever to win a Formula One Grand Prix at the age of 18 years and 228 days.[3]

In his first eight races with Red Bull he achieved six top-five finishes, including four podiums.

During the Belgian Grand Prix, Verstappen collided with Räikkönen at the first corner, pushed Vettel, Räikkönen and Pérez wide at Les Combes, and aggressively blocked Räikkönen on the Kemmel straight.[51] Verstappen was criticised for his driving, with Räikkönen saying that he "was going to cause a huge accident sooner or later"; Verstappen's boss, Horner, said that the driving was "on the edge", and that "Verstappen will learn from Belgium".[52] On 2 September 2016 F1 director Charlie Whiting called in Verstappen for a discussion. Whiting gave Verstappen a gentle warning because of his aggressive driving.[53] However, in October drivers' concerns about Verstappen's defensive tactics led the FIA to disallow moving under braking.[54]

At the 2016 Brazilian Grand Prix, Verstappen qualified fourth.[55] In a rain affected race, he barely managed to avoid hitting the guardrail when he spun on the main straight. After an additional tyre change from intermediates back to rain tyres, he ran in 16th place with just 15 laps remaining. Verstappen then made several overtakes in the closing laps to eventually finish on the podium in third place.[56] He received considerable praise for his performance, with his team principal Christian Horner calling it "one of the best drives I've seen in Formula One".[57] However, he came under criticism from Sebastian Vettel, who claimed that Verstappen had pushed him off the track when he gained a position on him at Junção corner late in the race. The race stewards did not share Vettel's view and decided that no reprimand was warranted.[58]

2017 season

Verstappen at the 2017 British Grand Prix

During the first 14 races of the 2017 season, Verstappen suffered seven retirements, four due to mechanical issues,[59] and three due to first lap collisions in Spain, Austria and Singapore.[60] Of the races finished, however, he claimed a third place in China, and another five races classified fourth or fifth.

From the Malaysian Grand Prix onward, Verstappen enjoyed a surge of success. He won his second Formula One race at the 2017 Malaysian Grand Prix, one day after his 20th birthday, passing Lewis Hamilton for the lead in the early stages of the race. He finished second in the following race in Japan.[61] He then finished third at the United States Grand Prix, but was classified fourth after his final lap overtake on Kimi Räikkönen was deemed illegal.[62] He then won his third Formula One race (and second in 2017) at the Mexican Grand Prix, after passing Sebastian Vettel on the opening lap and leading until the end of the race.[63]

2018 season

Verstappen at the 2018 Austrian Grand Prix

In the first six races of the season, Verstappen had been involved in at least one incident in each race. In Australia, he qualified 4th, but fell behind Kevin Magnussen at the start. In his attempts to retake the position he ran wide multiple times and damaged his car, with a spin causing him to fall further down the order. He recovered to eventually finish the race in 6th place.[64] At the next race in Bahrain, he crashed during qualifying and started in 15th place.[65] He had a productive first lap after which he found himself in the points while challenging Lewis Hamilton. He attempted an overtake on the reigning World Champion at the start of lap two, but collided with the Mercedes driver and suffered a puncture that ultimately led to suspension damage, forcing him out of the race.[66]

At the next race in China, Verstappen qualified 5th and had moved up to 3rd at the end of the first lap. Both Red Bull drivers pitted for fresh tyres during a safety car which left them with a tyre advantage over the front-runners ahead. In an overtake attempt on Sebastian Vettel for 3rd place, Verstappen collided with the championship leader, causing him to fall to 8th and receive a 10-second penalty. He recovered to 4th place, with his penalty causing him to be classified 5th. Teammate Ricciardo went on to win the race.[67] In Azerbaijan, Verstappen was embroiled in a race-long battle with Ricciardo for 4th place. After numerous position changes between the two teammates during the race, Ricciardo ran into the back of Verstappen during an overtake attempt from which the Dutchman aggressively defended, causing the retirement of both cars. Both drivers were blamed by the team and reprimanded by the stewards.[68] Verstappen bounced back in Spain with his first podium of the season by finishing 3rd behind the Mercedes drivers, holding off Sebastian Vettel. However, the race was also not without incident as he had run into the back of Lance Stroll during the virtual safety car period, causing minor front wing damage.[69]

In Monaco, Verstappen made another error when he crashed near the end of the third free practice session in an incident which closely resembled a crash he had at the same spot two years earlier.[70] His team could not repair his car in time for qualifying and he had to start last at a track on which it is notoriously difficult to overtake.[71] Teammate Ricciardo, meanwhile, pressed home Red Bull's advantage at the track by taking pole position and the race win. Verstappen managed to salvage 2 points by finishing 9th place, overtaking 6 cars on track.[72] Team principal Christian Horner commented on Verstappen's start of the season, saying he "needed to stop making these mistakes" and that he could "learn from his teammate", while Helmut Marko, head of driver development at Red Bull, said that Verstappen was "too impatient".[71] Verstappen now lay in 6th place in the championship with 35 points, only 3 points ahead of Alonso in a much slower McLaren, and 37 points behind his teammate in 3rd, who had taken two wins in the first six races.

In Canada, Verstappen topped all three practice sessions and qualified 3rd, two-tenths off Sebastian Vettel in pole position. He eventually finished 3rd and set the fastest lap of the race. The following race in France brought him 2nd place. In AustriaRed Bull's home track—he started 4th on the grid, passed Kimi Räikkönen before taking advantage of retirement from Valtteri Bottas and a botched pit-stop strategy by Lewis Hamilton, who later had to retire from 4th place, to claim the fourth race victory of his career. In Britain, Verstappen was plagued by issues, finishing the first practice session early due to a gearbox problem and crashing in the second practice session before retiring from the race due to a brake problem. He would then finish 4th in Germany after strategy errors let a recovering Hamilton get past him as he went on to win the race. Verstappen ended the first half of the season with a retirement in Hungary and was narrowly behind his teammate in the championship due to his own recent resurgence and Ricciardo's unreliability.

Verstappen enjoyed a very strong second half of the season, achieving podium finishes at Belgium, Singapore, Japan and the USA, the latter of which he achieved 2nd place having started from 18th on the grid due to a suspension failure in qualifying. Verstappen then earned his fifth career win in Mexico. He had been visibly angry after just missing out on becoming the youngest pole-sitter in Formula One history, with Ricciardo beating him to pole position by 0.026 seconds. Verstappen, however, had a much better start than Ricciardo and took the lead of the race into the first corner, overtaking the fast-starting Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton. He was poised to win the 2018 Brazilian Grand Prix, having overtaken Räikkönen, Vettel, Bottas and Hamilton. However, he collided with Force India driver Esteban Ocon who was trying to unlap himself on faster tyres. Ocon received a 10-second stop and go penalty for the incident. After the collision with Ocon, Verstappen finished in 2nd place behind Hamilton. During an argument with Ocon after the race, Verstappen pushed the Force India driver, for which he was given two days of "public service" as a penalty by the FIA.[73] He then finished his season with another podium as he finished 3rd in Abu Dhabi.[74]

Verstappen ended the season in 4th place in the championship with 249 points, claiming two wins, eleven podium finishes and two fastest laps.

2019 season

Verstappen on his way to winning the 2019 Austrian Grand Prix

After Ricciardo moved to Renault for 2019, Verstappen was joined at Red Bull (initially) by Pierre Gasly. Verstappen qualified in 4th and finished 3rd in Australia, the first podium finish for a Honda-powered car since the 2008 British Grand Prix. Verstappen was on course for a second 3rd-place finish in Bahrain before a late safety car prevented him from overtaking Charles Leclerc's ailing Ferrari, keeping him in 4th place. Two more 4th-place finishes followed in China and Azerbaijan, before a second podium came as he finished 3rd in Spain. In Monaco, Verstappen qualified in 3rd place. He was released into the path of Valtteri Bottas during the drivers' pit stops, gaining 2nd place but receiving a 5-second penalty as a result. Verstappen crossed the line in 2nd place but was demoted to 4th by the penalty.

In Canada, Verstappen's final lap in the second qualifying session was hampered by a red flag brought out by Kevin Magnussen's crash. This caused Verstappen to qualify 11th and start the race in 9th place. He later recovered to finish 5th. In France he started and finished in 4th place. In Austria, Verstappen started 2nd but suffered a poor start, dropping down to 8th. After a charge towards the front, he made his way up to 2nd before controversially passing Leclerc for the lead of the race with three laps to go. This marked the first Honda-powered race victory since the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix. In Britain, Verstappen, running in 3rd place, was hit from behind during an overtake attempt by Sebastian Vettel and spun into the gravel. Verstappen was able to continue and crossed the line in 5th place.

The wet and chaotic German Grand Prix began in a similar fashion to the race in Austria for Verstappen, as a poor start caused him to fall behind. However, he would inherit the lead mid-way through the race after a crash by race leader Hamilton. Verstappen would go on to extend his lead after the track began to dry, claiming his second victory of the season. In Hungary, he claimed the first pole position of his career, and led most of the race before being passed in the closing laps by Hamilton, who had made another stop for fresh tyres in a gamble to catch the leader. By the summer break, Verstappen's strong performances in the first half of the season made some consider him an outside contender for the championship.

Verstappen on the podium after winning the 2019 Brazilian Grand Prix

Prior to the Belgian Grand Prix, Verstappen received a new teammate in Alexander Albon after Pierre Gasly was demoted back to Toro Rosso. In the race, Verstappen had a poor start and collided with Kimi Räikkönen at the first corner, resulting in suspension damage and causing Verstappen's first retirement of the season. In Italy, he did not set a time during qualifying as he would already be required to start from the back of the grid due to an engine component penalty. After damaging his front wing on the first lap, he recovered to finish the race in 8th place. 3rd and 4th place finishes followed in Singapore and Russia respectively. After suffering damage in a first-lap collision with Charles Leclerc in Japan, Verstappen suffered his 2nd retirement of the season.

In Mexico, he qualified in 1st place before being handed a grid penalty for ignoring yellow flags after a crash by Valtteri Bottas. Verstappen suffered a puncture early in the race after making contact with Bottas, falling to the back of the field before eventually recovering to 6th place. A 3rd place finish in the United States followed, before Verstappen took the second pole position of his career with a 1:07.508 pole lap time in Brazil. In a chaotic race, he passed Lewis Hamilton for the lead on two separate occasions before going on to claim his third victory of the season. Verstappen ended the season with a 2nd-place finish in Abu Dhabi.

Verstappen finished the 2019 season in 3rd place in the championship with 278 points, the best result of his career thus far. He claimed three race victories, nine podium finishes, two pole positions and three fastest laps.

2020 season

Verstappen will continue racing for Red Bull in 2020, alongside Albon. On 7 January 2020, it was announced that Verstappen had signed a contract extension to race for Red Bull until the end of 2023.[4]

Racing record

Firsts

Verstappen holds numerous "firsts" in Formula One racing. In 2015, he became the youngest driver to compete in Formula 1 at the 2015 Australian Grand Prix for Scuderia Toro Rosso.[75] He is also the youngest driver to lead a lap during a Formula One Grand Prix, youngest driver to set the fastest lap during a Formula One Grand Prix, youngest driver to score points, youngest driver to secure a podium, youngest Formula One Grand Prix winner in history,[76] youngest multiple Grand Prix winner, youngest to win the same Grand Prix multiple times and youngest to win the same Grand Prix in successive years. On 3 August 2019, he became the first ever Dutch F1 driver to take pole position, for the Hungarian Grand Prix, while also setting a new lap record on the Hungaroring and becoming the 100th polesitter in the sport's history.[77]

Career summary

Season Series Team Races Wins Poles FLaps Podiums Points Position
2014 Florida Winter Series N/A 12 2 3 3 5 N/A 3rd
FIA European Formula 3 Championship Van Amersfoort Racing 33 10 7 7 16 411 3rd
Macau Grand Prix 1 0 0 1 0 N/A 7th
Zandvoort Masters Motopark 1 1 1 0 1 N/A 1st
Formula One Scuderia Toro Rosso Test driver
2015 Formula One Scuderia Toro Rosso 19 0 0 0 0 49 12th
2016 Formula One Scuderia Toro Rosso 4 0 0 0 0 204 5th
Red Bull Racing 17 1 0 1 7
2017 Formula One Red Bull Racing 20 2 0 1 4 168 6th
2018 Formula One Aston Martin Red Bull Racing 21 2 0 2 11 249 4th
2019 Formula One Aston Martin Red Bull Racing 21 3 2 3 9 278 3rd

Complete FIA European Formula 3 Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 DC Points
2014 Van Amersfoort Racing Volkswagen SIL
1

Ret
SIL
2

5
SIL
3

2
HOC
1

Ret
HOC
2

DNS
HOC
3

1
PAU
1

3
PAU
2

Ret
PAU
3

Ret
HUN
1

Ret
HUN
2

16
HUN
3

4
SPA
1

1
SPA
2

1
SPA
3

1
NOR
1

1
NOR
2

1
NOR
3

1
MSC
1

3
MSC
2

Ret
MSC
3

2
RBR
1

5
RBR
2

4
RBR
3

12
NÜR
1

1
NÜR
2

Ret
NÜR
3

3
IMO
1

Ret
IMO
2

2
IMO
3

1
HOC
1

1
HOC
2

5
HOC
3

6
3rd 411

Complete Formula One results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicates fastest lap)

Year Entrant Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 WDC Points
2014 Scuderia Toro Rosso Toro Rosso STR9 Renault Energy F12014 1.6 V6 t AUS MAL BHR CHN ESP MON CAN AUT GBR GER HUN BEL ITA SIN JPN
TD
RUS USA
TD
BRA
TD
ABU    
2015 Scuderia Toro Rosso Toro Rosso STR10 Renault Energy F12015 1.6 V6 t AUS
Ret
MAL
7
CHN
17
BHR
Ret
ESP
11
MON
Ret
CAN
15
AUT
8
GBR
Ret
HUN
4
BEL
8
ITA
12
SIN
8
JPN
9
RUS
10
USA
4
MEX
9
BRA
9
ABU
16
12th 49
2016 Scuderia Toro Rosso Toro Rosso STR11 Ferrari 060 1.6 V6 t AUS
10
BHR
6
CHN
8
RUS
Ret
5th 204
Red Bull Racing Red Bull RB12 TAG Heuer 1.6 V6 t ESP
1
MON
Ret
CAN
4
EUR
8
AUT
2
GBR
2
HUN
5
GER
3
BEL
11
ITA
7
SIN
6
MAL
2
JPN
2
USA
Ret
MEX
4
BRA
3
ABU
4
2017 Red Bull Racing Red Bull RB13 TAG Heuer 1.6 V6 t AUS
5
CHN
3
BHR
Ret
RUS
5
ESP
Ret
MON
5
CAN
Ret
AZE
Ret
AUT
Ret
GBR
4
HUN
5
BEL
Ret
ITA
10
SIN
Ret
MAL
1
JPN
2
USA
4
MEX
1
BRA
5
ABU
5
6th 168
2018 Aston Martin Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB14 TAG Heuer 1.6 V6 t AUS
6
BHR
Ret
CHN
5
AZE
Ret
ESP
3
MON
9
CAN
3
FRA
2
AUT
1
GBR
15
GER
4
HUN
Ret
BEL
3
ITA
5
SIN
2
RUS
5
JPN
3
USA
2
MEX
1
BRA
2
ABU
3
4th 249
2019 Aston Martin Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB15 Honda RA619H 1.6 V6 t AUS
3
BHR
4
CHN
4
AZE
4
ESP
3
MON
4
CAN
5
FRA
4
AUT
1
GBR
5
GER
1
HUN
2
BEL
Ret
ITA
8
SIN
3
RUS
4
JPN
Ret
MEX
6
USA
3
BRA
1
ABU
2
3rd 278

Did not finish, but was classified as he had completed more than 90% of the race distance.

References

  1. Green, Jonathan (20 October 2017). "Max Verstappen signs new Red Bull contract to the end of 2020". skysportsf1.com. Sky UK. Retrieved 12 November 2018.
  2. "Jos Verstappen over de nationaliteit van Max (translated: Jos Verstappen about the nationality of Max)" (in Dutch). Retrieved 13 June 2016.
  3. Ostlere, Lawrence (15 May 2016). "F1: Max Verstappen wins Spanish GP after Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg crash – live!". the Guardian. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
  4. "Max Verstappen extends contract with Aston Martin Red Bull Racing". verstappen.nl. 7 January 2020. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
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