Hadjar déçu par son faible écart avec Verstappen lors des qualifications

Isack Hadjar a qualifié son tour de piste de décevant malgré une courte distance de 0,028 seconde derrière Max Verstappen lors du Grand Prix du Canada.

Hadjar a décroché la septième place sur la grille à Montréal, ce qui constitue son meilleur résultat depuis l'ouverture de la saison à Melbourne. Il avait signé le meilleur temps en Q2, devançant Verstappen de 0,504 seconde, mais n'a amélioré son chrono que de 0,040 seconde en Q3. Le pilote français a confié à Canal+ avoir réalisé un « tour de merde » et s'est dit « très déçu » après ses bonnes performances lors des séances précédentes, bien qu'il ait terminé à 0,357 seconde de la pole position, son écart le plus faible à ce jour.

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Red Bull F1 drivers Isack Hadjar and Max Verstappen in Miami GP pits, Hadjar shrugging off qualifying deficit after DQ as Verstappen looks confident.
Image générée par IA

Hadjar downplays gap to Verstappen after Miami qualifying DQ

Rapporté par l'IA Image générée par IA

Following his disqualification for a technical infringement, Red Bull's Isack Hadjar downplayed his 0.825-second qualifying deficit to teammate Max Verstappen at the 2026 F1 Miami Grand Prix, blaming low-grip conditions rather than a true performance gap. Verstappen credited a steering system fix and upgrades for Red Bull's resurgence.

Max Verstappen was knocked out in Q2 during qualifying for the Japanese Grand Prix, securing only 11th place on the grid, while teammate Isack Hadjar starts eighth. The Red Bull driver described his RB22 as completely undriveable and voiced growing discontent with Formula 1's 2026 regulations, hinting at major life decisions. Jos Verstappen criticized the new era for prioritizing chaos over racing.

Rapporté par l'IA

Red Bull team principal Laurent Mekies says the squad is not concerned about Isack Hadjar despite a difficult Miami Grand Prix weekend. The 21-year-old driver was disqualified from qualifying for an illegal car part and later crashed during the race. Mekies attributed the issues to mistakes by both the team and the driver.

Red Bull's Formula 1 team encountered significant balance issues during Friday practice at the Japanese Grand Prix, leaving drivers Max Verstappen and Isack Hadjar well off the pace. Team principal Laurent Mekies described the squad as 'very far' from the frontrunners, citing fundamental problems with the RB22 car. Verstappen warned there is 'no easy fix' for the woes.

Rapporté par l'IA

Red Bull Racing is grappling with performance issues in the new Formula 1 era, finishing well behind the frontrunners at the Japanese Grand Prix. Max Verstappen placed eighth and Isack Hadjar 12th, as team principal Laurent Mekies acknowledged the team is a second off the pace. Mercedes has dominated early races amid major regulation changes.

Max Verstappen mocked McLaren after the team started the Canadian Grand Prix on intermediate tyres while other frontrunners chose slicks. The decision backfired as the track dried, leading to early pit stops for both McLaren drivers.

Rapporté par l'IA

Max Verstappen voiced strong dissatisfaction with Formula 1's 2026 regulations following a frustrating weekend at the Chinese Grand Prix, likening the racing to 'Mario Kart.' The Red Bull driver battled midfield cars before retiring mid-race. Mercedes boss Toto Wolff attributed some of Verstappen's complaints to his team's car issues.

 

 

 

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