Due to Max Verstappen’s First DNF in 2 Years, Red Bull Star Very Narrowly Missed on Lewis Hamilton’s Record

Due to Max Verstappen’s First DNF in 2 Years, Red Bull Star Very Narrowly Missed on Lewis Hamilton’s Record
Credits: IMAGO / Motorsport Images

Max Verstappen’s hope to take home his third consecutive victory of the 2024 season came to a heartbreaking end in Melbourne. The Red Bull driver suffered a reliability issue for the first time in 2 years, and it stopped him from achieving multiple milestones. Among them was Lewis Hamilton’s long-standing record of successive point finishes.

Advertisement

Verstappen failed to finish an F1 race for the first time in 44 races. In all the 43 previous races, Verstappen finished in the points (he won the majority of them). His brakes giving out in Albert Park last Sunday meant that he has to start from scratch, if he wants to match or beat Hamilton’s record of 48 consecutive points finishes.

Verstappen could have achieved Hamilton’s incredible feat in Monaco later this year, but unfortunately, it could take him years to do the same again. Hamilton’s streak started at the 2018 British GP, and lasted until the 2020 Bahrain GP. Verstappen started his streak in Imola in 2022, and his last points finish came in the race before Melbourne- the 2024 Saudi Arabian GP.

Advertisement

After Carlos Sainz overtook Verstappen on the first lap in Melbourne, smoke started coming out from his left rear wheel, which soon turned to fire. As a result, the three-time world champion limped into the pits and got out of the car, bringing his weekend to a premature end.

How the Australian GP DNF hurt Max Verstappen

Verstappen lost out on a chance of breaking Hamilton’s record in Melbourne. But there was another thing the Red Bull ace missed out on. He was on a streak of 9 consecutive race wins, which came to an end following Sainz’s victory.

Verstappen already has a 10-race win streak under his belt from the 2023 season, which was also broken by Sainz, interestingly. Winning 9 races in a row is no easy feat in itself, and Verstappen has now done it twice.

Even though Verstappen and Red Bull had a day to forget in Melbourne, it was one to remember for Ferrari. The Prancing Horses claimed their first 1-2 finish since Bahrain 2022 and looked strong in terms of performance. Many believe that, had Verstappen not retired, Sainz would still have won the Grand Prix.

Advertisement

Mercedes and Lewis Hamilton also had a disastrous outing in Melbourne last Sunday. Hamilton had to retire on lap 17 due to a power unit failure, and George Russell crashed out on the final lap, ending Mercedes’ weekend with 0 points.

For the first time since the 2021 Italian GP, both Hamilton and Verstappen retired from a race. That year, they were both championship contenders and took each other out.

Related Posts

The Price of Authenticity: Lando Norris’s €5,000 Fine Ignites F1’s Fiery Debate Over Censorship and Adrenaline

In the meticulously polished and high-stakes world of Formula 1, where billion-dollar budgets clash at over 200 miles per hour, every single word uttered by a driver…

THE CRACK IN THE PRANCING HORSE: FIA Report Exonerates Hamilton, Revealing Ferrari’s Dangerous Design Flaw That Shocked Leclerc and Plunged F1 into Chaos

In the rarefied, high-stakes world of Formula 1, where the margin between glory and disaster is measured in milliseconds and micrograms, a catastrophic failure is rarely just…

The ‘Green Secret’: Why Adrian Newey’s Aston Martin AMR26 Is Already F1’s Most Terrifying Weapon

The world of Formula 1 has always been defined by its cycles of dominance, revolution, and the relentless pursuit of an unfair advantage. With the regulation change…

The Monza Betrayal: How Team Orders Cost Oscar Piastri the F1 Title and Fueled a Blockbuster Charles Leclerc Swap Rumor

The paddock is not just buzzing; it is shaking. Beneath the veneer of corporate stability and public congratulations, a seismic shift is underway at McLaren that threatens…

The Anatomy of Rage: Lewis Hamilton’s Meltdown and the Fragile Future of His Ferrari Dream

The silence was the loudest sound of the 2025 Formula 1 season. As Lewis Hamilton walked away from his Ferrari one final time in Abu Dhabi, his…

Lando Norris’s Two-Point Thriller: F1 Crown Sparks Horrifying Fan Vengeance After Abu Dhabi Showdown

The Formula 1 season has concluded in a maelstrom of shock, exhilaration, and terrifying controversy, leaving fans, pundits, and rivals reeling. In a title decider that rewrote…