Author: quyen1

  • Mercedes preparing world record £128MILLION-A-YEAR offer for Max Verstappen to replace Lewis Hamilton

    Mercedes preparing world record £128MILLION-A-YEAR offer for Max Verstappen to replace Lewis Hamilton

    MERCEDES could break the bank with a record-breaking deal to sign F1 world champion Max Verstappen as Lewis Hamilton’s replacement.

    Sources in Austria claim the F1 team are tabling a whopping £128MILLION-A-YEAR package to lure the three time world champion.

    Totto Wolf wants Max Verstappen at Mercedes
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    Totto Wolf wants Max Verstappen at MercedesCredit: Getty

    The Red Bull star could replace Ferrari-bound Lewis Hamilton
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    The Red Bull star could replace Ferrari-bound Lewis HamiltonCredit: Splash
    It comes after Red Bull Racing were rocked by the news that design whizz Adrian Newey is stepping back from his role in the team.

    SunSport reported on Tuesday how Verstappen’s father Jos and his manager, Raymond Vermeulen, are expected to meet the three owners of the Merc F1 team.

    That includes team boss Toto Wolff, Mercedes-Benz CEO Ola Kallenius, and Ineos and Manchester United shareholder, Sir Jim Ratcliffe.

    The Verstappen camp have made it clear that they are assessing their options following their spectacular fallout with team boss Christian Horner.

    It comes after an internal investigation where Horner was cleared of allegations of inappropriate behaviour towards a female colleague.

    Verstappen’s father said in Bahrain that Horner’s position in control of the team was ripping it apart.

    Horner responded that he would not stand in his driver’s way if he wanted to leave, despite having a contract worth over £40 million a year that runs until the end of 2028.

    It means that Mercedes however, could be forced to stump up compensation for Verstappen, who is on course to win his fourth straight title this season.

    Wolff has made no secret of the fact that he would love to sign Verstappen and is close with the family and they both live in Monaco.

    He is desperate to return the team to winning ways but has so far failed to see them muster a challenge.
    Inside Lewis Hamilton’s £13m collection of supercars including £4m classic and £1.6m ride made entirely for him
    However, Wolff knows he faces a tough task in trying to convince the driver to leave Red Bull for Mercedes.

    Verstappen has seen Mercedes produce three duds in succession, leading somewhat to Hamilton’s decision to quit, while Red Bull have delivered him three title-winning cars.

    Consequently there is a high degree of risk in making the switch, which Mercedes are hoping to acknowledge with a substantial contract that comes loaded with bonuses.

    Verstappen meanwhile has tried to distance himself from the speculation linking him with Mercedes.

    However, he is likely to come in for some questioning about his future at this weekend’s Miami Grand Prix.

  • Ayrton Senna had vision he would die the night before his fatal crash – we’d never seen him look so haunted, says F1 ace

    Ayrton Senna had vision he would die the night before his fatal crash – we’d never seen him look so haunted, says F1 ace

    ICON of Formula One Ayrton Senna told doctors he had visions of his tragic death the night before his horror crash 30-years-ago today.

    Concerns started to brew in the F1 paddock on race day after the Brazilian great turned up looking “distant” and completely haunted, says fellow F1 ace Johnny Herbert.

    Formula One great Ayrton Senna had visions of his tragic death the night before his horror crash
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    Formula One great Ayrton Senna had visions of his tragic death the night before his horror crashCredit: Reuters

    Senna sitting in the car he would end up dying in after it smashed into a concrete wall as his suspension crashed through his helmet
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    Senna sitting in the car he would end up dying in after it smashed into a concrete wall as his suspension crashed through his helmetCredit: AFP

    The moment of Senna’s fatal crash at Imola in 1994
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    The moment of Senna’s fatal crash at Imola in 1994

    Former driver Johnny Herbert says the Brazilian great turned up looking 'distant' and completely haunted on race day
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    Former driver Johnny Herbert says the Brazilian great turned up looking ‘distant’ and completely haunted on race dayCredit: Getty
    The triple world champion died almost instantly when his Williams ran off the road at 190mph and smashed into a concrete wall on lap seven of the San Marino Grand Prix.

    Senna was leading the race when he lost control at the notorious Tamburello corner and his car’s suspension crashed through his helmet.

    Herbert said: “Senna feared he was going to die the night before the crash.

    “He apparently had a premonition the night before that he was going to die.”

    Herbert claims Senna told F1’s medical expert Professor Sid Watkins about his nightmares.

    Watkins told the Brazilian to quit and go live a quiet life fishing after accomplishing greatness in motorsports already – Senna felt he was no where near finished with the sport.

    He looked very distant. It was very, very eerie knowing what was going to happen

    Johnny HerbertEx-F1 Ace

    Pre-race, as all the brave drivers spoke to their mechanics about the conditions, competitors and atmosphere, Herbert says Senna was acting in a way never seen before from the experienced professional.

    He told Instant Casino: “You see the cameras trained on his face before the race. It was a very different Ayrton than we had seen before.

    “He looked very distant. It was very, very eerie knowing what was going to happen.

    “To go through what he did with those feelings on his own apart from the conversation with Professor Sid, must have been so hard.”

    SAN MARINO TRADEGY

    The 1994 San Marino Grand Prix weekend has long been coined as the darkest event in Formula One history.

    Senna, one of the sports greatest drivers died instantly when his Williams car ran off the road at 190mph and smashed into a concrete wall on the seventh lap of the Imola circuit.

    Herbert said: “I remember Senna’s crash. We all stopped on the grid with the red flag waiting for news.

    “I remember on the screen we had on the car the shock of seeing the crash and then seeing his helmet move. I remember thinking, ‘It’s ok, he is alive.’

    “But it wasn’t, it was just a nerve twitch. It was such a shock.”
    Video shows Ayrton Senna racing in the San Marino Grand prix in 1994 before tragic death of driver
    Ex-F1 driver turned pundit Martin Brundle once revealed his “anger” at the race continuing after a short break.

    Brundle, who ended up finishing eighth said: “We raced past a pool of Senna’s blood for 55 laps.”

    The 34-year-old was the second driver to tragically die on track that weekend after Austrian Roland Ratzenberger crashed his Simtek car into a wall during qualifying.

    Senna’s fellow Brazilian Rubens Barrichello survived his own near-death experience after being involved in a terrifying high-speed crash during practice.

    The exact cause of Senna’s fatal crash remains inconclusive.

    The front page of The Sun after Senna's death in May 1994
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    The front page of The Sun after Senna’s death in May 1994Credit: The Sun

    Senna was a three-time world champion with McLaren
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    Senna was a three-time world champion with McLarenCredit: AP

    He has been immortalised with a statue in his honour
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    He has been immortalised with a statue in his honourCredit: Reuters

    Senna helped revolutionise the sport both before and after his death through his excellent driving skills and increased safety measures
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    Senna helped revolutionise the sport both before and after his death through his excellent driving skills and increased safety measuresCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    Former F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone described it as “a disastrous weekend”.

    He said this week he was told that F1 would be cancelled in the wake of the event and two deaths.

    Safety measures were instantly employed after the crash with the halo being the biggest improvement to the cars.

    Countless drivers, including Brit Lewis Hamilton, have praised the revolutionary safety device for saving their lives ever since.

    SENNA’S LEGACY

    Senna sits on top of the modern F1 mountain alongside fellow legends Michael Schumacher, Lewis Hamilton and Niki Lauda.

    To this day, only five men have won more world titles than Senna even with his career being cut short at just 34.

    The former boss of Senna and F1 kingpin Sir Frank Williams was the man who owned and allowed the Brazilian to go out on the fateful day in the car that proved faulty.

    His daughter Claire said: “Frank had a love affair with Ayrton. He got into his heart, got into his mind, and he always wanted to put him in his race car.

    “Dad’s wish then came true, but it ended in the worst possible way.

    “You can see the pain in his eyes every time he thinks about the accident.”

    The life of F1 icon Ayrton Senna

    March 21, 1960: Ayrton Senna da Silva was born in Sao Paulo, Brazil

    1973: Senna starts competitive racing in go-karts built by his dad

    1977: He wins his first few titles before the big South American Karting Championship crown

    1980-1983: Begins racing in cars winning Formula Ford 1600, British and European Formula Ford 2000 and British Formula 3 titles

    1984: Gets his chance in F1 with Toleman and scores points in his second ever race

    1985: Secures first F1 win with Lotus

    1988: Signs huge contract with McLaren and wins first ever World Championship

    1990: Wins second World Championship after an impressive season

    1991: Wins third and final world title

    1993: Senna completes ‘Lap of the Gods’ at rain-hit European Grand Prix

    1994: Moves to Williams for the final season of his illustrious career

    May 1, 1994: Senna tragically dies during the 1994 Imola Grand Prix

    Senna was a global superstar who carried the spirit of South America on his back in the 80s and 90s.

    Shortly before his death, he told his family he wanted to start a project to help bring quality education to poor children in Brazil.

    Three months after the crash, Senna’s family opened the Senna Institute. It now helps 1.5million children per year.

    His pal Herbert said: “I have lovely memories of Senna – he belongs among the greats.

    “He would have been world champion for several years to come.

    “We saw him getting to his peak in that period, but we were never able to see the best of that peak.

    “It is difficult to compare eras but without doubt he was one of the greatest of all time.”

    Current world champion Lewis Hamilton lists Senna as his idol and has famously copied the design of the Brazilian’s yellow crash-helmet before.

    Lando Norris also described Senna as the “whole package”.

  • Five haunting questions behind Formula One’s greatest riddle – what caused Ayrton Senna’s fatal crash 30 years ago?

    Five haunting questions behind Formula One’s greatest riddle – what caused Ayrton Senna’s fatal crash 30 years ago?

    HEADING into a curve that the Formula One genius Ayrton Senna knew very well at the San Marino Grand Prix, there was no sign it would be the Brazilian’s final moment.

    But rather than his blue Williams racing car turning into the Tamburello left corner, it sped at 190mph straight into a concrete barrier.

    Ayrton Senna's fatal crash 30 years ago
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    Ayrton Senna’s fatal crash 30 years agoCredit: Getty

    The Brazilian was a three-time Formula One world champion
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    The Brazilian was a three-time Formula One world championCredit: AP:Associated Press

    Senna's girlfriend Adriana Galisteu mourns in front of his coffin
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    Senna’s girlfriend Adriana Galisteu mourns in front of his coffinCredit: AFP
    Thirty years on from the three-time world champion’s death, serious questions still remain about how a man revered as the motorsport’s greatest talent could have lost control of his hi-tech vehicle.

    Was it really a driver error? Or were ill-judged modifications to Senna’s car to blame?

    Investigators in Italy believed members of the British-based Williams team were at fault.

    Conspiracy theorists have asked why it took the company a month to hand over the black boxes to the authorities and why they arrived so badly damaged.

    But fingers were also pointed at bumps in the historic Imola circuit.

    On top of that, there were questions as to whether debris had properly been removed from the track following an earlier collision. Could a shard of metal have interfered with Senna’s racing car?

    The risk of racing was clear because the day before, 33-year-old Austrian driver Roland Ratzenberger suffered a fatal crash.

    Jordan’s Rubens Barrichello had been lucky to get out alive following a high speed smash on the Friday.

    Critical issues about the car’s safety were largely skirted over in the Bafta-winning 2010 documentary Senna.

    And today no one knows why his life ended at the age of 34.
    Video shows Ayrton Senna racing in the San Marino Grand prix in 1994 before tragic death of driver
    Thankfully, improvements introduced following his death has meant Ayrton was the last F1 driver to die during a race.

    That has only added to his legacy.

    Ben Hunt, The Sun’s F1 correspondent, says: “There is no other sporting icon who is celebrated in such a way.

    “The livery of his iconic crash helmet, featuring the colours of the Brazilian flag, are seen at every race on the calendar.”

    Here we look at the possible causes

    Car trouble?

    Senna in his Williams car on the day of the crash
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    Senna in his Williams car on the day of the crashCredit: AFP
    There were plenty of problems facing Williams and its reported £16million-salary star signing Senna in the weeks running up to the crash.

    Williams drivers had won the previous two Formula One championships, but new rules had cut into their reliance on electronic devices.

    Ayrton struggled with the latest vehicle, admitting at the start of the season: “The cars are very fast and difficult to drive. We’ll be lucky if something really serious doesn’t happen.”

    As is common in motorsport, he liaised with the team’s engineers to change the set-up, including adjusting the steering column.

    Senna did not appear to turn the wheel on the seventh lap as he approached the bend and instead went into the wall.

    During the crash part of the suspension had penetrated his helmet, causing a fatal head injury.

    The steering wheel was found to be broken.

    Italian prosecutors alleged that it had snapped prior to impact, leaving Senna unable to control his speeding vehicle.

    They charged the team’s founder Sir Frank Williams, technical director Sir Patrick Head and chief designer Adrian Newey with manslaughter.

    At the trial the prosecution said: “The steering column had been cut and a new element – which was not of the same quality of metal or of the same diameter, being 18mm instead of 22mm – was welded in.

    A complete stranger came up to me and said ‘Your dad is a murderer’

    Claire Williams

    “And it was where the new element had been welded that the column broke.”

    The Williams team analysis showed the steering column was not to blame and all three men were acquitted.

    In 2003 the Italian courts reopened the case and in 2007 determined that the steering column was responsible, but by that point it was too late to rearrest anyone for manslaughter.

    Newey admitted in his 2017 autobiography: “Regardless of whether that steering column caused the accident or not, there is no escaping the fact that it was a bad piece of design that should never have been allowed to get on the car.”

    While people in the sport do not blame the legendary Sir Frank, who died in 2021, some members of the public did.

    Sir Frank’s daughter Claire Williams remembered a year after Senna’s death “being in a pub, a complete stranger came up to me and said ‘Your dad is a murderer’.”

    Unsafe track?

    Roland Ratzenberger died on the same track the day before Senna
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    Roland Ratzenberger died on the same track the day before SennaCredit: AFP
    There were concerns about the Tamburello corner on which Senna’ fate was sealed.

    A number of drivers had come off at that corner, including Gerhard Berger who’d gone up in flames in 1989.

    But all of the incidents were linked to car trouble rather than the track design.

    Senna, though, had noticed ripples on that bend during practice.

    There is no other sporting icon who is celebrated in such a way

    Ben Hunt

    Just before the San Marino race he said about the track: “My car reacts a bit nervously on this kind of surface.

    “It stems from the special aerodynamics but it’s also got to do with a difficulty in the suspension.”

    The Italians charged three senior men connected to the track, Federico Bendinelli, Giorgio Poggi and Roland Bruynseraede, with manslaughter.

    State prosecutor Maurizio Passarini claimed that a raised edge at the Tamburello corner launched the Williams car into trouble.

    The three men were found not guilty by a judge in 1997.

    ‘Modern F1 misses a Senna’

    By Bent Hunt, The Sun’s F1 Correspondent

    SENNA still has global appeal with new fans attracted by the ‘Drive to Survive’ boom.

    So why is he so popular?

    One simple explanation is that he was a brilliant driver, which of course we know and there is simply not enough room to pick out the evidence of this.

    Another aspect was the dark arts. The ability to mix sport with politics to achieve what he wanted or perhaps what he felt he deserved.

    He coupled this with his attitude on track, taking matters into his own hands and stepping over the line, such as deliberately ramming Alain Prost in Japan 1990, influencing the outcome of the title.

    Questionable morals perhaps, but taking it to the limit and going beyond is now almost celebrated.

    Senna offered a new level of professionalism but with it a complexity within his own personality.

    Magnetic charm and a level of charisma that is unthinkable among today’s drivers on the grid.

    Senna was intelligent, opened up with honesty and discussed the dangers he faced, putting his life on the line each time he went out to race.

    He appealed to and intrigued the public in equal measure. He had a personality.

    And that’s something that F1 desperately misses right now.

    Race debris?

    The wreck of Senna's car following his fatal crash
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    The wreck of Senna’s car following his fatal crashCredit: Allsport
    At the start of the race Bennetton’s JJ Lehto stalled and an unsighted Pedro Lamy in a Lotus piled into his car, sending pieces of their vehicles into the crowd and on to the grid.

    A safety car was brought out so that the debris could be collected and then the race restarted.

    But a photograph in Autosport magazine suggested that Ayrton’s car passed over one piece.

    Could that have caused a slow puncture?

    Williams’s Adrian Newey said in 2017: “His right front and right rear tyres were destroyed in the accident, so it was impossible to examine them, but debris that size could have caused a slow puncture.

    “The puncture would have caused the bottoming we saw, and that in turn would have caused the rear to step out as it lost grip.”

    Driver error?

    Senna, pictured during a race in 1989, pushed his cars to their limits
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    Senna, pictured during a race in 1989, pushed his cars to their limitsCredit: Getty

    Alain Prost was knocked out a crucial championship race by Senna
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    Alain Prost was knocked out a crucial championship race by SennaCredit: Getty
    Ayrton Senna is regarded as one of the greatest ever racing drivers – with his fearlessness putting him on the podium.

    He had a reputation for pushing his machines to their absolute limits.

    On top of that the Brazilian hated losing, admitting: “Being second is to be the first of the ones who lose.

    “Winning is like a drug. I can’t settle for second or third in no circumstances whatsoever.”

    In 1990 he knew he would become world champion if his great rival Alain Prost did not finish the Japanese Grand Prix.

    At the first turn he ran into the back of Prost’s Ferrari taking them both out of the race.

    Some observers believed it was deliberate and Senna later admitted: “I didn’t care if we crashed.”

    Is it possible that Senna was simply racing too hard at San Marino in 1994 in order to keep ahead of Michael Schumacher who was not far behind him in second place?

    Black Box controversy

    A jury were shown the black box recorder from Senna's car
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    A jury were shown the black box recorder from Senna’s carCredit: EPA
    Senna’s Williams car was fitted with two black box recorders designed to keep data safe if there was a crash.

    They were similar to the devices on aeroplanes, but not as robust.

    A senior member of staff at the San Marino track told the 1997 trial that two members of the Williams team removed the recorders shortly after the crash.

    After giving evidence Fabrizio Nosco told journalists: “I have seen thousands of these devices and removed thousands for checks.

    “The two boxes were intact, even though they had some scratches. The Williams device looked to have survived the crash.”

    It took the Williams team over a month to hand over the black boxes to the crash investigators.

    When they arrived they were too badly damaged to yield the information needed to determine the exact cause of the accident.

    Other witnesses told the court they were wrecked by the high speed impact of the Williams vehicle hitting the wall.

  • Lewis Hamilton tells Adrian Newey to join him at Ferrari as he rubs salt in the wounds of F1 rival Verstappen & Red Bull

    Lewis Hamilton tells Adrian Newey to join him at Ferrari as he rubs salt in the wounds of F1 rival Verstappen & Red Bull

    LEWIS HAMILTON says he would “very much” like to have Adrian Newey join him at Ferrari.

    Newey, F1’s most successful designer, announced he was leaving Red Bull Racing on Wednesday.

    Lewis Hamilton said it would be a privilege to work with Adrian Newey at Ferrari
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    Lewis Hamilton said it would be a privilege to work with Adrian Newey at FerrariCredit: Rex

    Newey announced his Red Bull departure yesterday and has been heavily linked with Ferrari
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    Newey announced his Red Bull departure yesterday and has been heavily linked with FerrariCredit: PA
    The 65-year-old has negotiated an early exit from this deal with the world champions that would allow him to move early next year.

    It would free him up to join Hamilton at Ferrari for next season in preparation for a major new rule change in F1 in 2026.

    Hamilton was quizzed ahead of this weekend’s Miami GP about working with Newey and said: “Adrian has such a great history and track record.

    “He’s done an amazing job through his career, engaging with teams and the knowledge he has. I think he would be an amazing addition.

    “I think they [Ferrari] already have a great team, making huge strides forward and progress. Their car is quicker this year. But it would be a privilege to work with him.”

    Hamilton was grilled if an attempt to sign Newey was part of his wishlist when he started negotiating with Ferrari.

    He added: “This is all private conversation stuff. If I was to do a list of people I would love to work with, he would absolutely be at the top of it.

    “When I joined McLaren I think it was an evolution of his car. I got there just after he left, so that car would have evolved from a concept that he had worked on.

    “I felt privileged that I had the chance to touch something that he had worked on.

    “Racing against the team that he’s been so heavily a part of has been a massive challenge but I think we have to remember there are a lot of people in the background.
    Formula One’s Highest Earners
    “It’s not one person, it’s a whole team of people who do the job. You can imagine all the amazing experience that he brings to the team, but the people that he works with will continue to do an amazing job.

    “I don’t anticipate Red Bull not continuing to build great cars moving forward. But any team would be fortunate to have the opportunity to work with him.”

    Max Verstappen, who has been the main beneficiary of Newey’s designs in recent seasons, insisted the designer’s exit will not force him to quit Red Bull despite being linked with a move to Mercedes.

    He said: “All of these things, a couple of years ago, would have been a bit unexpected but I think it is always very important to remain calm and focused on your job, know who you’re working with, feel comfortable.

    Max Verstappen also opened up on his Red Bull future following Newey's exit
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    Max Verstappen also opened up on his Red Bull future following Newey’s exitCredit: Reuters
    “At the end of the day, we need to have the fastest car, that’s what I always demanded, that’s what we finally got for a couple of years now.

    “And we have a very strong technical team that are part of the team still for a long time. It goes on like it was going before.

    “Of course Adrian from when he started at Red Bull, he was incredibly important for the success that they had.

    “Over time, his role has changed a bit and a lot of people don’t understand what he was actually doing.

    Who is Adrian Newey?

    Adrian Newey was the design chief at Red Bull Racing.

    The 65-year-old has played a crucial role in designing the cars that have helped Sebastian Vettel and Max Vertappen win SEVEN drivers’ world championships.

    Newey began designing in Formula One back in 1988 with March, where his cars were far more competitive than expected.

    After March he spent time with Williams and McLaren before joining Red Bull in 2005.

    Throughout his career he has contributed to the cars that have secured 12 World Constructors’ titles and 13 World Drivers’ championships.

    He is widely considered to be the greatest designer in the history of F1.

    “I don’t say he wasn’t doing anything but his role has evolved. A lot of good people came into the team that have strengthened that whole department.

    “Of course I would have preferred him to stay, for sure, because you can always rely on his experience and just as a person he is a great guy to chat to and relate to.

    “Because he is very bright, very smart but he would also talk to the driver and interpret that into the car, in terms of he would try to imagine himself driving.

    “But I also really trust that the technical team we have outside of Adrian is very, very strong. They have basically shown that with the last few years with how competitive the car is.

    But any team would be fortunate to have the opportunity to work with him.

    Lewis Hamilton

    “From the outside, it looks very dramatic. But I think if you know what is happening inside the team it is not as dramatic as it seems.”

    When asked again if he would consider his position in Red Bull, Verstappen again denied that he would be seeking a move.

    He added: “I think people are making up a lot of things at the moment because they don’t understand how the roles were in the team.

    “But of course, I cannot deny I would have preferred him to stay, just for how he is as a person, his knowledge and what he will potentially bring to another team if he wants to join.

    Inside track on Hamilton’s life

    LEWIS HAMILTON has driven his way into pole position as Formula One’s most prolific winner.

    The British speedster lives life in the fast lane both on and off the track, with a string of high-profile romances and jet-set lifestyle.

    Hamilton made his name at McLaren and Mercedes but stunned the racing world by signing a £100million deal to join Ferrari for next season.

    His exploits have seen him rub shoulders with Hollywood icon Brad Pitt but Lew snubbed the chance to feature in Top Gun 2.

    And fans can follow his fortunes on the latest season of Netflix’s smash hit Drive To Survive.

    Hamilton’s talent saw him go from humble origins in Stevenage to boasting an £11m car collection.

    He joined celeb dating app Raya after splitting from Brazilian beauty Juliana Nalu.

    And his exes are said to include Rita Ora, Rihanna and Nicole Scherzinger.

    Hamilton was embroiled in a bitter feud with Nico Rosberg but the pair buried the hatchet to sport £35k watches they were given for FREE.

    He also shared high-profile battles with Fernando Alonso and Sebastian Vettel.

    But his most shocking showdown saw Max Verstappen handed the World Championship over him by a controversial safety car decision.

    The Brit is chasing a record eighth world title – the first of which came in 2008 and has seen Felipe Masa sue F1 for £62m after a crash saw him miss out.

    Check out all our Lewis Hamilton articles here.

    “If someone really wants to leave they should leave. That’s also what I wrote to him. We talk, it’s not like suddenly we don’t talk.

    “If you think that is the right decision for yourself and family, or you seek a different challenge or whatever, you have to do it.”

    Meanwhile, Sergio Perez says Red Bull will cope without Newey, but says he will be an asset to any team he joins.

    He said: “Everyone is fully committed to the season and the future looks bright.

    “It is normal for some movement, but the organisation looks strong and I don’t expect more changes.

    “Adrian is much more than a designer, he can influence set-up and strategies and a strong guy who will make an immediate impact wherever he goes.”

  • Christian Horner loses Red Bull mastermind Adrian Newey as world champions confirm he will leave in major blow to the team… with move to Ferrari and joining Lewis Hamilton edging closer

    Christian Horner loses Red Bull mastermind Adrian Newey as world champions confirm he will leave in major blow to the team… with move to Ferrari and joining Lewis Hamilton edging closer

    Adrian Newey is understood to have held talks with Ferrari this week after being released from his Red Bull contract early — a departure that was confirmed by the world championship-winning team on Wednesday.

    A move to Italy would bring Formula One’s most successful designer into partnership with Lewis Hamilton, who is joining the Scuderia from Mercedes next year.

    The Newey deal has yet to be done, but well-informed contacts suggest Ferrari want the 65-year-old to act as their ‘super consultant’. He currently earns £15million a year and could double his salary.

    It is expected he would start in time to have a pivotal hand in the development of the next generation of Ferrari cars ahead of a major revamp of the regulations in 2026.

    Italy’s Gazzetta dello Sport reported Newey spoke to Ferrari team principal Fred Vasseur in London on Tuesday — a story indicated to be correct to Mail Sport. We can further reveal that several key F1 figures were in London this week, including Red Bull managing director Oliver Mintzlaff.


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    Red Bull have confirmed the imminent departure of F1’s most successful designer Adrian Newey

    Team chief Christian Horner (pictured with wife Geri Halliwell) will have to do without the mastermind behind Red Bull's design
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    Team chief Christian Horner (pictured with wife Geri Halliwell) will have to do without the mastermind behind Red Bull’s design

    Newey is a legendary F1 designer and could take his services to Ferrari after his departure
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    Newey is a legendary F1 designer and could take his services to Ferrari after his departure

    Newey’s exit is an evident blow to Red Bull and embattled boss Christian Horner, the team principal who brought Newey from McLaren to Red Bull nearly 20 years ago. They have since won seven drivers’ titles in two stints together, through Sebastian Vettel and Max Verstappen.

    Newey will continue to attend races with Red Bull this season, including in Miami this weekend. He is due to travel there in Horner’s jet today.

    Newey will still work on his beloved RB17 supercar project before leaving the company next spring.

    Red Bull insist Newey’s departure is not directly linked to the sex scandal that has engulfed the team since allegations of coercive behaviour were made against Horner by a female employee in February, but driven by growing resentment at how he has been less than fully credited for the team’s success. He was on the brink of resigning last year, too, but instead accepted an improved offer.

    The scandal — which has seen Horner, 50, cleared in an internal investigation, subject to an ongoing appeal — stirred the pot further.

    It is understood Newey felt Horner was grabbing too much of the limelight and that credit for his own input was being unevenly shared with his French design colleague Pierre Wache.

    Horner paid tribute to 'true legend' and 'friend' Newey as the world champions confirmed his exit
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    Horner paid tribute to ‘true legend’ and ‘friend’ Newey as the world champions confirmed his exit

    The Red Bull chief, who has won seven world championships with Newey, paid tribute to the outgoing veteran
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    The Red Bull chief, who has won seven world championships with Newey, paid tribute to the outgoing veteran

    Newey is thought to believe credit is being too unevenly taken by the constructor's chief engineer of performance engineering Pierre Wache
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    Newey is thought to believe credit is being too unevenly taken by the constructor’s chief engineer of performance engineering Pierre Wache

    Newey could now be set to join Lewis Hamilton at Ferrari in his bid to win an eighth world title
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    Newey could now be set to join Lewis Hamilton at Ferrari in his bid to win an eighth world title

    Newey’s upcoming availability is a massive boost to Hamilton, 39, as he seeks a record eighth title, this time in red.

    Newey is the greatest technical guru Formula One has ever known, having triumphed with Williams, starting with Nigel Mansell’s 1992 championship-dominating car, and McLaren, before being poached by Red Bull. In all, the nerdish genius is behind an eye-watering 25 drivers’ and constructors’ titles.

    I understand Newey will either join Ferrari — the most likely eventuality — or retire. There is no other team that he would imaginably join.

  • Christian Horner is trolled on Instagram over his tribute to Red Bull mastermind Adrian Newey, as fans blame HIM and the ‘sex texts’ affair for him quitting: ‘He’s leaving because of you’

    Christian Horner is trolled on Instagram over his tribute to Red Bull mastermind Adrian Newey, as fans blame HIM and the ‘sex texts’ affair for him quitting: ‘He’s leaving because of you’

    Christian Horner has been mocked on Instagram on the back of his tribute to Red Bull mastermind Adrian Newey.

    Horner’s Red Bull team were dealt a major blow on Wednesday when they confirmed Newey, the person responsible for their dominant car, will leave the team after 18 years.

    The news is the latest development in a series of events that have unfolded since Horner was accused of ‘coercive behaviour towards a female employee’, before being investigated and subsequently cleared.

    Red Bull, meanwhile, insist Newey’s departure is not directly linked to the allegations that have engulfed the team since February, but driven by growing resentment at how he has been less than fully credited for the team’s success.

    Red Bull boss Horner took to Instagram to pay tribute to ‘friend’ Newey, but was hit by backlash from fans who seem to refuse to move on from the allegations, which have gone to appeal.

    Christian Horner has been mocked on Instagram following his tribute to Red Bull mastermind Adrian Newey
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    Christian Horner has been mocked on Instagram following his tribute to Red Bull mastermind Adrian Newey

    Horner, husband of Spice Girl Geri Halliwell (left), was previously accused of 'coercive behaviour towards a female employee'
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    Horner, husband of Spice Girl Geri Halliwell (left), was previously accused of ‘coercive behaviour towards a female employee’

    He took to Instagram to pay tribute to Newey (left), who will leave Red Bull after 18 years
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    He took to Instagram to pay tribute to Newey (left), who will leave Red Bull after 18 years

    The tribute, however, backfired, with fans commenting that the Red Bull boss is to blame

    The tribute, however, backfired, with fans commenting that the Red Bull boss is to blame

    ‘For me, when Adrian joined Red Bull, he was already a superstar designer,’ Horner wrote in a statement that mirrored the words from his official statement released by Red Bull. ‘Two decades and 13 championships later he leaves as a true legend.

    ‘He is also my friend and someone I will be eternally grateful to for everything he brought to our partnership.

    ‘All of our greatest moments from the past 20 years have come with Adrian’s hand on the technical tiller. The legacy he leaves behind will echo through the halls of Milton Keynes and the RB17 Track Car will be a fitting testament and legacy to his time with us.’

    One fan posted in response: ‘Look what you have done do the team. Such a shame honestly!’

    Another added: ‘Christian can’t really see that the team is falling apart because of him and Max’s dad.’

    ‘You’re the reason he’s leaving buddy,’ a third wrote.

    Before the start of the current Formula 1 season, Red Bull GmbH in Salzburg, the world champion team’s parent company, said in a statement: ‘The independent investigation into the allegations made against Mr Horner is complete, and Red Bull can confirm that the grievance has been dismissed.

    ‘The complainant has a right of appeal. Red Bull is confident that the investigation has been fair, rigorous and impartial.


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    Horner and Newey have won a total of seven world championships together in their time at Red Bull

    Fans showed little mercy when suggesting the reason for Newey's departure from the team

    Fans showed little mercy when suggesting the reason for Newey’s departure from the team

    ‘The investigation report is confidential and contains the private information of the parties and third parties who assisted in the investigation, and, therefore, we will not be commenting further out of respect for all concerned. Red Bull will continue striving to meet the highest workplace standards.’

    The exact nature of the complaints remain unknown, but what appeared to be intimate WhatsApp exchanges with a female colleague were sent to Formula One’s most influential figures.

    The bombshell email contained 79 documents, including hundreds of messages, many of them apparently of a sexual nature.

    The anonymous sender copied in leading people in the sport, such as FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem and F1 chief executive Stefano Domenicali, as well as accredited media gathered in Bahrain for the scandal-ridden opening race of the season.

    Horner is married to Spice Girl Geri Halliwell, and the pair have remained determined to stay strong since the allegations surfaced.

    They have been seen together in public a number of times since, with Halliwell attending races hand-in-hand with her husband.

    Newey, meanwhile, may take up a position at Ferrari ahead of the new regulations due for introduction in 2026, which would be a major boost to the team.

    A move to Italy would bring F1’s most successful designer into partnership with Lewis Hamilton, who is joining the Scuderia next year.

    That deal has yet to be done, but it is understood that Newey, 65, is wanted by Ferrari to act as their ‘super consultant’. He currently earns £15million a year at Red Bull and could double his salary with the potential switch.


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    What appeared to be intimate WhatsApp exchanges between Horner and a female colleague were sent to Formula One’s most influential figures earlier this year


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    Halliwell and Horner remained strong, however, continuing to appear in public together following the allegations

    Geri Halliwell and Christian Horner arrive together at Grand Prix

    The images shared by Horner included photos of celebrations involving the pair, who have won seven drivers’ championship titles during their time together.

    What was meant to be a heartfelt post didn’t go to plan, however, and comments continued to roll in criticising the Red Bull principal.

    ‘You are fully aware he probably left because of you?’ one fan wrote, accompanied by a laughing face emoji.

    Another posted: ‘He’s leaving the team cuz of you bro,’ while a third wrote: ‘It’s ur fault.’

  • Meet Lia Block! Daughter of late rally legend Ken Block is forging her own path in F1’s Academy series after conquering off-road racing

    Meet Lia Block! Daughter of late rally legend Ken Block is forging her own path in F1’s Academy series after conquering off-road racing

    At just 17-years-old, Lia Block has already accomplished more in racing than many others will in a lifetime.

    She was born as a member of a racing family, with her parents (especially her father, the late rally legend Ken Block) providing a pathway to motorsport many others would dream of having.

    Lia has taken that chance and ran with it – forging her own path to become incredibly successful in the rally ranks before legally becoming an adult.

    Now, she’s joined up with the driver academy at Williams Racing and will take part in her second F1 Academy race this weekend in Miami.

    She spoke to DailyMail.com earlier in the week about her career so far, what it means to be in a racing division made up of all women, and ultimately, what her goals are in the sport she was seemingly destined to take part in.

    Meet Lia Block: the teenage daughter of motorsport royalty carving her own path
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    Meet Lia Block: the teenage daughter of motorsport royalty carving her own path

    She currently is cutting her teeth in open wheel racing with the F1 Academy series
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    She currently is cutting her teeth in open wheel racing with the F1 Academy series

    For those that are hearing the name Lia Block for the first time, allow her to tell you what you’ve missed out on.

    She began karting for fun at five years old and sat behind the wheel of an off-road car by age ten.

    After traveling around the world with her father, Ken Block – the founder of the Hoonigan racing team and one of motorsport’s most popular figures – she began showing interest in pursuing racing herself by the age of eleven.

    ‘My dad always opened the doors for me, but never forced me to do anything,’ she says. ‘So I went off and tried every other sport I could, but eventually made it back to [motorsport] when I was about 10 or 11.

    ‘So I think that made me want it even more because I had tried all these different things, but coming back to motorsport was truly like I knew what I wanted to do.’

    Once she decided to participate full-time, she went full throttle.

    She’s competed in off-road series’ since eleven years old and began rallying at 15-years-old. By age 16, she had won the American Rally Association Championship with two races in hand in a modified rear-wheel drive Subaru BRZ.

    But Block has been behind the wheel since age five and has been racing since age 11
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    But Block has been behind the wheel since age five and has been racing since age 11

    She's mostly taken part in nitrocross, rally, and other off-road events - winning a title at age 16
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    She’s mostly taken part in nitrocross, rally, and other off-road events – winning a title at age 16

    She's also climbed Pikes Peak and competed in the Baja 1000 with her mother, Lucy
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    She’s also climbed Pikes Peak and competed in the Baja 1000 with her mother, Lucy

    In addition to her rallying pursuits, she also raced in nitrocross as well as in the electric rallying series Extreme E.

    Other pursuits included winning her class in the Baja 1000 alongside her mom Lucy and racing her father’s pink Porsche 911 dubbed the ‘Hoonapigasus’ up the Pikes Peak hill climb. And now she’s in the F1 Academy.

    But sadly, her father wasn’t there to watch her transition from the world of rallying to open-wheelers after his tragic passing in a snowmobile accident in January of 2023.

    ‘He was truly my whole world and the only person I ever looked up too,’ Lia wrote in an emotional Instagram post the day after his passing. ‘No matter what I did he was always there to support me.

    ‘I can’t believe how fast he was taken from all of us. No words can describe of how much of an amazing human my dad was, he lived so many lives, accomplished more in 55 years than most people could in 10 lifetimes, and lived his life to the absolute fullest every single day.’

    Lia's father was off-road racing legend Ken Block, who died in a snowmobile accident in 2023
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    Lia’s father was off-road racing legend Ken Block, who died in a snowmobile accident in 2023

    In a post to social media at the time of his death, Lia called him 'truly my whole world'
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    In a post to social media at the time of his death, Lia called him ‘truly my whole world’

    Nearly a year on from that tragedy, Lia has begun to venture out into her own world of racing through the all-woman F1 Academy series – headed up by Suzie Wolff.

    In November of 2023, Williams approached her with an offer to join their driver academy – which she accepted. She joined ART Grand Prix for the 2024 season, where she’s teammates with Bianca Bustamante and Aurelia Nobels.

    She describes the transition from rallying to open-wheelers as ‘starting from the ground up again’ and says that she only had accumulated 20 days behind the wheel before the first F1 Academy race in Jeddah.

    ‘I felt like I knew nothing. Obviously, doing a bit of karting when I was younger, I wasn’t completely oblivious, but it was still a very steep learning curve.

    ‘And also coming from competing at the top of rally in the US and winning the Championship, I was used to winning. I wasn’t used to being at the bottom.

    ‘So it was quite different going to open-wheel racing and having to learn everything and everything be so new.’

    Now she has made the transition from rallying to open-wheelers with the F1 Academy series
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    Now she has made the transition from rallying to open-wheelers with the F1 Academy series

    She has the backing of Williams Racing and joined their Williams Driver Academy in 2024
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    She has the backing of Williams Racing and joined their Williams Driver Academy in 2024

    Lia says that she’s honored to be among the first generations of drivers to take part in the all-women’s series and says that her fellow competitors are ‘very experienced, and they’ve raced against men all their life and they know how to hold their own.’

    Experience is something she has, but more so behind the wheel than in her years. She’s one of the three youngest drivers in the division at age 17, racing against people as old as 32.

    She does admit that she was surprised by the difference in experience on track, but says, ‘it makes me more excited to keep learning because I want to surpass them.

    ‘To do it at [17-years-old] makes me feel like I have a better opportunity to move up into F3 and F2 at a younger age.’

    With only seven rounds and 14 races, Block hasn’t been behind the wheel of a car for a race since the opening round in Jeddah back in early March – making it about two months between competitions.

    It's been nearly two months since Lia has been behind the wheel of her car for a race
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    It’s been nearly two months since Lia has been behind the wheel of her car for a race

    It may have been a long time, but Lia says, ‘it feels like it’s been only three days. We’ve been in the gym a lot just working on fitness as well as a test in Zandvoort, the F1 Academy mid-season test, as well as just being in the sim. [We’re] doing everything we can possibly do to get ready for Miami.’

    She does admit that it’s hard spending so much time away from the car, and that it’s different from previous series’ she’s raced in before, ‘especially coming from off-road and rally, when you’re almost in the car all day for two days on a race weekend, and you don’t have much time in between.

    ‘So it is hard to be away from the car that much and not have that much seat time. But I think that’s what makes it even more difficult.

    ‘And I think it makes it even more fun to get back in a car, and it makes you want to get in the car sooner.’

    While much of her previous racing was done in the USA, this marks her first home race in the F1 Academy series. ‘Honestly with the only one home race we get this year, it makes me really excited to be in front of the US crowd.

    ‘It just makes it even more special when you only get to do it once a year, especially on an F1 Grand Prix weekend with so many more people. Rally, it’s not as big as that. There’s not stadiums full of people watching the race because it’s very remote. So it’s even more of an experience for me.’

    Now, Lia has her eyes set on the future - whether that's in world rallying circuits or Formula 1
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    Now, Lia has her eyes set on the future – whether that’s in world rallying circuits or Formula 1

    With her background already established and her present occupied with the task of breaking through this series, a question about her future comes about.

    She’s got plenty of success and experience in the off-roading world and now she’s getting into open wheelers. So is there one that she would like to pursue more?

    ‘Honestly, if I could do a bit of both, I would love to, and I hope to do some more rally this year as well as F1 Academy.

    ‘But long term goal would to be either to make it to one of the top championships, whether that’s World RX, WRC, or F1.’

  • How Adrian Newey will spend his final days at Red Bull after the F1 world champions confirmed the departure to the sport’s most successful designer

    How Adrian Newey will spend his final days at Red Bull after the F1 world champions confirmed the departure to the sport’s most successful designer

    Adrian Newey’s departure from Red Bull was officially confirmed on Wednesday in a major blow to the Formula One world champions.

    The team confirmed their chief technical officer will leave the Red Bull group in the first quarter of 2025.

    Newey has spent nearly two decades with the team and is viewed as the mastermind behind the cars that have taken them to seven drivers’ titles in two stints, through Sebastian Vettel and Max Verstappen.

    Red Bull confirmed that Newey will be stepping back from his F1 duties, with his final months at the group set to focus on the development and delivery of Red Bull’s first hypercar.

    The RB17 was officially announced 2022, with Newey and Red Bull Advanced Technologies behind the creation of the car.


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    Red Bull have confirmed the imminent departure of F1’s most successful designer Adrian Newey

    Newey pictured with Christian Horner, left, and Max Verstappen, centre, will step back from his F1 duties
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    Newey pictured with Christian Horner, left, and Max Verstappen, centre, will step back from his F1 duties

    The group said two seat hypercar will deliver the ‘ultimate on-track driving experience’.

    When announcing the development of the car, Red Bull said it will be powered by a hybrid engine developing over 1,100bhp and will be designed around a carbon composite tub.

    The RB17, which takes its name from cars produced by Red Bull for Formula One, is claimed will have the ‘most advanced ground effect package available in a series production car.’

    The development of the hypercar, of which only 50 will be made, is viewed as a passion of Newey’s with the designer spearheading the project.

    ‘The RB17 distills everything we know about creating championship-winning Formula One cars into a package that delivers extreme levels of performance in a two-seat track car,’ he said in February.

    ‘Driven by our passion for performance at every level, the RB17 pushes design and technical boundaries far beyond what has been previously available to enthusiasts and collectors.’

    Newey is set to fully focus on the development of the car, which is due to go into production in 2025, in his final months with the team.

    He is understood to be wanted by Ferrari to act as their ‘super consultant’. He currently earns £15million a year at Red Bull and could double his salary with the potential switch.

    Newey, left, will instead focus on the development of Red Bull's hypercar before leaving in the first quarter of 2025
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    Newey, left, will instead focus on the development of Red Bull’s hypercar before leaving in the first quarter of 2025

    Red Bull Advanced Technologies released a concept photo of the RB17 hypercar in February
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    Red Bull Advanced Technologies released a concept photo of the RB17 hypercar in February

    A move to Italy would bring F1’s most successful designer into partnership with Lewis Hamilton, who is joining the Scuderia next year.

    Newey will continue to attend races this season, including in Miami this weekend.

    His departure is a blow to the world champion team and embattled boss Christian Horner, the team principal who brought Newey from McLaren to Red Bull nearly 20 years ago.

    Red Bull insist Newey’s departure is not directly linked to the allegations that have engulfed the team since news of allegations of coercive behaviour were made against Horner in February, but driven by growing resentment at how he has been less than fully credited for the team’s success.

  • Logan Sargeant says being sacrificed by Williams in Australia ‘doesn’t even cross my mind anymore’ as America’s only F1 star explains why his struggling team can compete in Miami

    Logan Sargeant says being sacrificed by Williams in Australia ‘doesn’t even cross my mind anymore’ as America’s only F1 star explains why his struggling team can compete in Miami

    As he sat in a high-rise building in New York City overlooking the East River, Logan Sargeant was on his phone fielding text messages and calls.

    There are hundreds, if not thousands, of people from his home area of south Florida asking him if he can try to get tickets to this weekend’s Miami Grand Prix.

    ‘Little do they know I get like, no tickets,’ Sargeant says with a laugh before adding that he tries to hand out ‘as many as I can’.

    Sargeant, a Fort Lauderdale native, is back in his own backyard for his second crack at success around the Hard Rock Stadium.

    Speaking exclusively to DailyMail.com, Sargeant described his approach to the race, his struggles with Williams to start the season, and his hopes for the rest of the campaign.

    Logan Sargeant is ready for a return to his home state of Florida for the Miami Grand Prix
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    Logan Sargeant is ready for a return to his home state of Florida for the Miami Grand Prix

    The Williams man described his mood going into the weekend as, ‘relatively relaxed, excited to be racing at home again.’

    He continued: ‘I think looking at it from a performance standpoint, it’s been not the easiest start of the year for the team. I don’t think we’ve really executed a clean weekend as a whole yet. So that has to be the approach going to the weekend.

    ‘I feel like if we do that, it’ll put us in a decent position. Whether it’s enough to score points or not, I’m not sure, but that has to be the target.’

    He’ll be looking for some better success after qualifying and finishing dead last in last year’s edition of the Miami Grand Prix.

    ‘I think last year didn’t go according to plan. I genuinely think this track should suit our car a little bit better,’ Sargeant believes.

    ‘So hopefully that gives us an opportunity… Obviously, I’ve had good moments racing in America, the race in Austin, qualifying in Vegas.’

    Sargeant, who scored points at the Circuit of the Americas last year, hopes to repeat that feat ‘in front of family and friends, all the people that are texting me, trying to get tickets to the race.

    ‘That would be amazing and definitely a special moment to do the full loop and come back and score points.’

    Sargeant and Williams Racing have had a rocky start to the year with no points picked up
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    Sargeant and Williams Racing have had a rocky start to the year with no points picked up

    Sargeant believes this year's car will be better suited to the Miami International Autodrome
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    Sargeant believes this year’s car will be better suited to the Miami International Autodrome

    While Sargeant says there’s always stress and that ‘pressure doesn’t really go [away]’ in a Formula One race, he believes his second time around the Miami International Autodrome will be more successful than his first one.

    ‘You have a bit more of a sense of comfort knowing the track than not knowing it. It’s always a big learning curve when you go to a track for the first time.

    ‘But I think the big thing is this week is a sprint, which will make things a little bit more challenging, make it more important that myself and the engineer has got the set up right going into the weekend as you have very limited time to change anything.

    ‘So yeah, fingers crossed. But we’ll have to wait and see… [we] just need to find our feet quickly.’

    Sargeant has not found his feet yet this season. Neither has his team. Williams are one of three teams yet to score a single point this campaign.

    Teammate Alex Albon has gotten close three times – with two P11 finishes and a P12 finish in the most recent race in China. Meanwhile, Sargeant’s best finish was P14 in Saudi Arabia.

    ‘I don’t think anyone’s particularly happy with how everything’s unfolded to start the year,’ he admitted. ‘I think we all know that there’s a lot more performance on the table.

    Sargeant: 'I don't think anyone's happy with how everything's unfolded to start the year'
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    Sargeant: ‘I don’t think anyone’s happy with how everything’s unfolded to start the year’

    ‘There’s a lot more that we can do to execute better weekends, and I think there’s bits and pieces everywhere of things that as a whole, we need to do better.

    ‘I think as long as we’re all aware of those, moving to fix those and ultimately get everything out of each other… That’s where we are and that’s where we know we need to head.’

    Sargeant was at the center of one of F1’s biggest on-track controversies of the year so far – when Williams removed him from his own car at the Australian Grand Prix after Albon wrecked and had irreparable damage to his machine.

    The team chose to put Albon in Sargeant’s car for the weekend to try and earn some points, but the Thai racer came up one place short.

    When asked to recall that moment, after a pause, Sargeant said that it was ‘maybe not as juicy as you’d expect, but obviously it was a disappointing moment.’

    Sargeant says he felt like he was having a ‘great weekend to that point’ saying that he was feeling ‘really comfortable’ after a P14 finish in Practice 1 and a P13 finish in Practice 2.

    The crux of Williams' problems came over a month ago at the Australian Grand Prix
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    The crux of Williams’ problems came over a month ago at the Australian Grand Prix

    Teammate Alexander Albon crashed hard in practice and couldn't race in his car that weekend
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    Teammate Alexander Albon crashed hard in practice and couldn’t race in his car that weekend

    So, the team made the decision to sideline Sargeant and put Albon in his car for the weekend
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    So, the team made the decision to sideline Sargeant and put Albon in his car for the weekend

    It left Logan looking on from pit lane while Albon only managed to pilot the car to a P11 finish
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    It left Logan looking on from pit lane while Albon only managed to pilot the car to a P11 finish

    ‘I would say that was more the disappointment – not being able to close out a weekend that was going so well to that point,’ Sargeant said. ‘But honestly, after that, I was there with the team the next day. And after that, I went to Bali and completely forgot about it for a week.

    ‘So it stuck with me as a disappointing moment for probably about 24 hours. And then from that point forward, I pretty much just cleared it from my head.’

    He added: ‘It doesn’t even cross my mind anymore. I’m just fully focused on the races ahead. I don’t even think about the past. As I said, from a whole, it hasn’t been a great start to the year, and now I’m just focusing on doing my part to help clean that up.’

    When it comes to pressure stemming from that Australia decision – then paired by a DNF in Japan and a setback in China – Sargeant tries to take a more optimistic tack.

    ‘I think you just have to look at the positive. There’s been quite a few of them. It goes back to the point of just needing a clean weekend to show a good step forward.

    ‘There’s always pressure. Racing is a performance-based sport, and you will quickly realize there is very short memory, both for positive and negative. So all it takes is a couple of good races. You’re on top of the world again.’

    Which brings us back to Miami. It’s hard to tell what a good race for Sargeant looks like, but if the rumors are to be believed, he needs to start turning his form around soon to try and achieve his stated goal of staying with Williams for 2025.

    That followed up with struggles in Japan and China that leaves Sargeant in a tough position
    +9

    That followed up with struggles in Japan and China that leaves Sargeant in a tough position

    Doing that in his backyard, as he puts it, would be the icing on the cake: ‘I think it’s just more enjoyable to be able to drive at home. It’s really hard to explain.

    ‘It’s just this extremely different feel in a weekend that you’re racing at home. And this goes for all three [American] Grand Prix. There’s a different atmosphere, a positive atmosphere, more excitement for myself and an extra source of motivation to just have a good weekend.

    ‘At the end of the day, every race matters. So when you look at pressure, it doesn’t matter where you are in the world. Every race, it doesn’t really change.

    ‘But I guess the feeling that you have at a race weekend can differ by the atmosphere of where you’re driving and the fans. Obviously, of course, I want to do great in front of the American fans.’

  • Lewis Hamilton does donuts on Fifth Avenue during F1 star’s quick pit stop in New York City before Miami Grand Prix

    Lewis Hamilton does donuts on Fifth Avenue during F1 star’s quick pit stop in New York City before Miami Grand Prix

    Lewis Hamilton made a quick pit stop in New York City this week before heading to Florida for the Miami Grand Prix.

    In footage shared by Formula 1 on social media, Hamilton could be seen driving his Mercedes car down the city’s famous Fifth Avenue and doing a donut as fans packed the streets to get a glimpse of the seven-time champion.

    His quick whizz past the Empire State Building was to celebrate Mercedes’ partnership with WhatsApp, after they combined with the messaging giants to produce a new race-car emoji.

    WhatsApp and Mercedes also turned the iconic building green on Monday night. to mark the launch of the new emoji.

    This weekend Hamilton is looking to improve on his showing at last month’s Chinese Grand Prix, in which he finished down in ninth place.

    Lewis Hamilton made a quick pit stop in New York City this week before heading to Florida for the Miami Grand Prix
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    Lewis Hamilton made a quick pit stop in New York City this week before heading to Florida for the Miami Grand Prix

    Hamilton could be seen driving his Mercedes car down the city's famous Fifth Avenue and doing a donut as fans packed the streets to get a glimpse of the seven-time champion
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    Hamilton could be seen driving his Mercedes car down the city’s famous Fifth Avenue and doing a donut as fans packed the streets to get a glimpse of the seven-time champion

    His whizz past the Empire State was to celebrate Mercedes' partnership with WhatsApp
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    His whizz past the Empire State was to celebrate Mercedes’ partnership with WhatsApp

    Hamilton and Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff take part in the lighting ceremony at the Empire State Building
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    Hamilton and Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff take part in the lighting ceremony at the Empire State Building

    It has been a difficult first three months of the season for the British driver, who is languishing down in ninth place in the overall F1 standings after three ninth and one seventh-place finish.

    He also failed to qualify for the Australian Grand Prix back in March, coming as a new low in his recent fall from grace.

    Nevertheless, the 39-year-old is enthused by the prospect of three races in the United States this year, with events in Texas and Las Vegas to follow Sunday’s Miami showpiece.

    ‘It is a dream for us to be in Miami and in the United States,’ he said.

    ‘They are massive sporting fans here so to be in such an important city like Miami where sport is huge – and now Formula One is part of that – it is great to see.

    ‘For such a huge country, it is amazing that we finally have three races here. The difficult thing with Formula One is that you usually visit a country once a year.

    ‘But the growth has been huge and it is such a big market for the sport.’