"This championship is out of reach": Red Bull F1 team principal Christian Horner on Sergio Perez
Aug 04, 2023
Spa [Belgium], August 4 : Red Bull driver Max Verstappen’s Sprint and Grand Prix victory double across the Belgian Grand Prix weekend helped to extend his position at the top of the drivers’ standings, and he is now 125 points ahead of his Red Bull team-mate Perez, who sits in second. Team Principal Christain Horner said that the championship is out of reach for Sergio Perez.
Sergio Perez is the teammate of Max Verstappen and Team Principal of Red Bull, Christian Horner believes that the Drivers' Championship title is out of the race for Sergio Perez.
According to the Formula 1 website, Christian Horner said, "I think Checo knows that barring a disaster for Max, this championship is out of reach, so it’s about him maximising his own performance, not losing out to any of the drivers behind and trying to pick up a few wins between now and the end of the year.”
Despite Verstappen’s huge lead in the standings, Red Bull Team Principal Horner believed Perez would still take a lot of self-belief from events in Spa going into the summer break.
Horner said, “I think he’ll take a lot of confidence from this performance. He qualified on the front row, he led the Grand Prix, he finished second, so yeah, he goes into the break a clear second in the drivers’ championship and he’ll take some confidence out of that.”
Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko had also commented to the media in the run-up to the Belgian Grand Prix that Perez had woken from “his championship dream”, and that had helped ease the pressure on the driver.
Responding to those comments, Horner said: “We know that Helmut is fairly straightforward in some of his analysis.
Red Bull leads nearest challenger Mercedes by 256 points in the constructors’ standings after 12 races, with Aston Martin 51 points further back. Perez, meanwhile, is 125 points behind Verstappen and 40 points ahead of third-placed Fernando Alonso in the drivers’ standings.
In the early stages of the season, there was a real threat that Perez could take the title challenge to the two-time world champion, with victories in Saudi Arabia and Azerbaijan backing up his credentials – Verstappen and Perez tied on two wins apiece after four rounds.
But a drop-off in a form that began in Monaco, with a string of poor qualifying outings hampering his race days, ended up denting Perez’s hopes of consistently challenging for race victories.
While there has been an improvement in form for the Mexican recently – as his second place in Belgium and third place in Hungary attest to – Verstappen has managed to elevate himself into a class of his own. That was ultimately characterised by the 22-second margin between the two drivers in Spa, despite Verstappen starting the race in P6.