close global

Welcome to GPFans

CHOOSE YOUR COUNTRY

  • NL
  • GB
  • IT
  • ES-MX
  • US
  • GB
Max Verstappen, Gianpiero Lambiase, generic, Red Bull, 2025

Max Verstappen F1 crisis reaches boiling point in tense exchange with Gianpiero Lambiase

Max Verstappen, Gianpiero Lambiase, generic, Red Bull, 2025 — Photo: © IMAGO

Max Verstappen F1 crisis reaches boiling point in tense exchange with Gianpiero Lambiase

Max Verstappen has picked up just eight points this season

Sam Cook
Digital Journalist
Sports Journalist who has been covering motorsport since 2023

Max Verstappen's frustrations at his new Red Bull F1 car were clear for all to see at the Chinese Grand Prix last weekend, with race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase hearing the worst of it.

Verstappen has cut a frustrated figure in the opening weeks of the season, not happy with the new regulations that have been brought into the sport this season, which he has constantly stated takes the fun out of F1, while also comparing the new racing to Mario Kart.

Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff said last weekend that Verstappen is only so critical about the new rules because his Red Bull team have not mastered them, and their drivers appear to be in a midfield battle.

Indeed, Verstappen has only picked up eight points from the first two race weekends, and is already 43 points behind early championship leader George Russell. The Dutchman has experienced one DNF already this year, while team-mate Isack Hadjar also had to retire from the Australian GP after a problem with the new Red Bull power unit.

And during the Chinese GP, Verstappen's frustrations towards his RB22 exploded into a barrage of fire at his long-suffering race engineer Lambiase. Near the beginning of the race after another poor start, Verstappen said: "I have never driven a car that is as difficult to handle as this one; I am losing a ridiculous amount of time."

As the race went on, Lambiase tried to urge Verstappen to calm down and focus. The stream of complaints from Verstappen continued, leading Lambiase to snap back: "Max, I am supposed to be on your side! I am just trying to help, nothing more."

Verstappen's race eventually came to an end on lap 46 when he was already a lap behind the leaders, after an issue with the energy recovery system (ERS).

F1 HEADLINES: Max Verstappen told to leave F1 as champion's rejection unveiled

Red Bull's disastrous new era

The heated discussion between Verstappen and Lambiase points to the immense frustration that the team are feeling since starting their new era of power unit production.

For the first ever time, both Red Bull and their sister team Racing Bulls are using power units that have been created in-house by Red Bull in partnership with Ford.

While the early signs for the new era were good during pre-season testing, Red Bull have been blighted by reliability issues so far in the 2026 season, as well as an RB22 car design that seems to be less than optimal.

Following sprint qualifying at the Chinese GP, pundit Chris Medland revealed on the F1TV live broadcast that Red Bull's problems went a lot deeper than their power unit.

"They said they were really struggling in the medium-speed sections," Medland said. "That covers the entire first and second sectors.

"So the power unit isn’t the problem. The car simply doesn’t work in medium-speed corners, so they just can’t get the speed out of it."

Team principal Laurent Mekies has a huge job on his hands to try and turn Red Bull into a podium-challenging entity as the 2026 season progresses.

READ MORE: Max Verstappen warns F1 over 'ruining the sport... It will bite them in the a***'

Related

F1 Red Bull Max Verstappen Chinese Grand Prix Gianpiero Lambiase
Ontdek het op Google Play