Motor racing-The tide is turning in Red Bull's favour
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[June 21, 2021]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - Red Bull went into
Sunday's French Grand Prix thinking they could win anywhere if they
beat Mercedes at Le Castellet, and Max Verstappen's victory has
lifted the Formula One title battle to another level.
The 23-year-old Dutch driver, now 12 points clear at the top, is
more than just a threat to Lewis Hamilton's dream of eight titles.
For the first time in the 1.6 litre V6 turbo hybrid era that started
in 2014, Honda-powered Red Bull have strung together three wins in a
row and cracks are starting to appear in the mighty Mercedes
machine.
Mercedes felt they were always going to struggle at Monaco and Baku,
the two street circuits before France that did not really suit their
car, but Le Castellet's Paul Ricard was something else.
The champions had until this weekend led every practice session
since the circuit rejoined the calendar in 2018, swept the front row
in qualifying and won from pole position.
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In 2019, the last previous race, they enjoyed a one-two finish.
"We came here knowing this would be one of Mercedes' strong
circuits. They'd led every lap here prior to this race bar one," Red
Bull boss Christian Horner told reporters.
"It's fantastic that we've had a big score here this weekend, it's
the win that Max should have had two weeks ago, but you can see how
close it is. There's nothing between the two cars."
"so we've just got to keep pushing, keep looking for performance and
pushing all the way through this... you can't take anything for
granted."
Verstappen and seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton both have
three wins each for the season, with the younger man missing out in
Azerbaijan after a late high-speed blowout while leading
comfortably.
Without that failure, Verstappen's championship lead would be much
greater.
Equally, Hamilton -- second on Sunday -- knows he could be leading
the standings had he not made a mistake and failed to score in Baku
and had Mercedes been sharper with their strategy in France.
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Red Bull's Max Verstappen during the
press conference FIA/Handout via REUTERS
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Fine margins have big consequences
when the two are so closely matched, but there can be no doubt that
Mercedes are facing the biggest challenge to their seven year streak
of domination and there may not be many easy wins ahead.
They are already 37 points behind Red Bull in the constructors'
standings after seven races.
Red Bull are the only ones to have had both drivers win races, with
Mexican Sergio Perez taking the chequered flag in Baku and looking
like the strong team mate Verstappen had needed.
With Mercedes' Valtteri Bottas off the podium now for three races in
a row, the Red Bull drivers have become the stronger pairing.
The next two back-to-back races are at Red Bull's home circuit in
Austria, a track that gave Mercedes two wins from pole last season
but where Verstappen won in 2019 with the fastest lap.
Nico Rosberg, Mercedes' retired 2016 world champion, saw a tilt in
the balance of power.
"It's such a boost and they (Red Bull) are really becoming the
dominant force more and more, which is putting so much pressure on
Mercedes," said the German as a pundit for Sky Sports television.
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"We're seeing that Mercedes are making mistake after mistake so they
need to be careful and they need to keep it together from now on to
have a chance."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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