Motorsport Week
  • Formula 1
    • 2025 Formula 1 Calendar
    • 2025 Formula 1 Standings
  • Formula E
    • 2025 Formula E Calendar
    • 2025 Formula E Standings
  • IndyCar
    • 2025 IndyCar Calendar
    • 2025 IndyCar Standings
  • WRC
    • 2025 WRC Standings
    • 2025 WRC Calendar
  • MotoGP
    • 2025 MotoGP Calendar
    • 2025 MotoGP Standings
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
  • WEC
    • 2025 WEC Calendar
  • IMSA
    • 2025 IMSA Calendar
  • World SBK
  • More
    • Formula 2
    • Formula 3
    • F1 Academy
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
    • Technical Insight
    • Galleries
    • About/Contact
    • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
  • Formula 1
    • 2025 Formula 1 Calendar
    • 2025 Formula 1 Standings
  • Formula E
    • 2025 Formula E Calendar
    • 2025 Formula E Standings
  • IndyCar
    • 2025 IndyCar Calendar
    • 2025 IndyCar Standings
  • WRC
    • 2025 WRC Standings
    • 2025 WRC Calendar
  • MotoGP
    • 2025 MotoGP Calendar
    • 2025 MotoGP Standings
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
  • WEC
    • 2025 WEC Calendar
  • IMSA
    • 2025 IMSA Calendar
  • World SBK
  • More
    • Formula 2
    • Formula 3
    • F1 Academy
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
    • Technical Insight
    • Galleries
    • About/Contact
    • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
Motorsport Week
Home Single Seater Formula 1

Ex-F1 driver denies current rules behind Daniel Ricciardo struggle

by Taylor Powling
10 months ago
A A
Daniel Ricciardo

Daniel Ricciardo struggled with F1's latest ground effect cars since 2022

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Ex-Formula 1 driver David Coulthard has discarded the notion that Daniel Ricciardo’s career “whimpering out” can be attributed to struggles with the latest regulations.

Ricciardo’s career in the series appears to be over with the announcement last month that Liam Lawson will replace him at RB over the remaining six events this term.

Red Bull’s decision to commit to a mid-season change comes amid Ricciardo being unable to prove since his comeback that he deserved a return to the senior setup.

The Australian’s woes mark a vast contrast to his pomp when he destroyed four-time F1 champion Sebastian Vettel in his debut campaign with Red Bull back in 2014.

RelatedPosts

Alpine remains committed to F1

New Renault CEO delivers verdict on Alpine’s F1 future

6 hours ago
Fred Vasseur is staying on with Ferrari

Ferrari explains decision to extend Fred Vasseur despite winless 2025 F1 campaign

8 hours ago

With subsequent moves to Renault and McLaren producing minimal success and his F1 retrieve not working out, Coulthard has cast his verdict on Ricciardo’s decline.

“The career of Daniel Ricciardo would appear that would be it for Formula 1,” Coulthard, a 13-time F1 race winner, said on the Formula For Success podcast.

“Never says never, there may well be another team that suddenly wants to tap into his knowledge, and he may pop up in another role for all we know that isn’t behind the cockpit.

“But it’s amazing, actually, how quickly the career seemed to pass. He is still a young man.

“Arrived with a bang, really asserted himself as one of the best overtakers in the other part of his career, won a heap of grands prix – he’s leaving the sport with eight grand prix victories.

“But it kind of whimpered out, let’s be honest about it. And it’s always difficult when you’re talking about people you know.

“But if we put to one side personal feelings and just look at the data, it just didn’t really seem to work for the last few years.

“Is it just ebb and flow of sportsmen and women’s talents are not infinite, they all have a timeline?”

Daniel Ricciardo won’t return with RB to complete the 2024 F1 season

Coulthard suspects age caught up to Ricciardo

Ricciardo managed high points past his initial Red Bull departure in 2018, recording two podiums with Renault and then an eighth win with McLaren at Monza in 2021.

However, Ricciardo’s spell with McLaren proved to be tumultuous as Lando Norris imposed a comprehensive loss that resulted in his contract being cut short in 2022.

The ex-Red Bull racer’s troubles against Norris worsened upon F1’s move back to ground effect cars in 2022, but Coulthard has denied that can explain his regression.

“It’s an interesting one, because we often talk about certain cars not suiting certain drivers.

“If I ever look at my own career with the benefit of not being lost in the emotion of all the distractions, if you look at the setups, you had wide tracks, like narrow track grooves, three-and-a-half litres, all those different things that we had, I was always where I was meant to be – there or thereabouts on my best days, a little bit light on the average days.

“Therefore, if I just see life through my eyes when I hear a driver going, ‘Oh, this car doesn’t suit me’, does any car really suit a driver?

“The very best guys just take the best out of whatever the regulations are through the period of their career.

“And I would expand that to Michael [Schumacher] when he came back.

“He was still a very good driver, took pole position in the Mercedes in Monaco, but he just didn’t seem as good.

“I would have preferred to race against Michael in his comeback with Mercedes than Michael when he was at Ferrari.

“I guess it’s that footballing thing that we often touch on about losing a yard.

“I wonder if it is just you’ve got a certain amount of energy and heartbeats where your full-on commitment is there – and in the moment where anything other than full-on commitment, no amount of experience is going to overcome that.”

READ MORE: Red Bull cites reason behind Daniel Ricciardo’s failed F1 return

Tags: CoulthardF1RBRicciardo
Share207Tweet130Share

Related Posts

Dan Ticktum has said he is "very likely" to remain with Cupra Kiro next season. Image: Emma Ridgway
Formula E

Exclusive: Dan Ticktum ‘very likely’ to remain at Kiro for Formula E Season 12

6 hours ago
Alpine remains committed to F1
Formula 1

New Renault CEO delivers verdict on Alpine’s F1 future

6 hours ago
Fred Vasseur is staying on with Ferrari
Formula 1

Ferrari explains decision to extend Fred Vasseur despite winless 2025 F1 campaign

8 hours ago
Load More

Discussion about this post

Upcoming Races

#EventDate
15Dutch GP29-31 August
16Italian GP05-07 September
17Azerbaijan GP19-21 September
18Singapore GP03-05 October
19United States GP17-19 October

Click here for the full 2025 F1 calendar

Drivers’  Standings

#DriverPts
Oscar Piastri284
Lando Norris275
Max Verstappen187
George Russell172
Charles Leclerc151
Lewis Hamilton109
Andrea Kimi Antonelli64
Alexander Albon54
Nico Hulkenberg37
Esteban Ocon27

Click here for full Drivers’ Standings

Latest Articles

Alpine remains committed to F1
Formula 1

New Renault CEO delivers verdict on Alpine’s F1 future

August 6, 2025
Fred Vasseur is staying on with Ferrari
Formula 1

Ferrari explains decision to extend Fred Vasseur despite winless 2025 F1 campaign

August 6, 2025
Carlos Sainz has had a mixed start with Williams
Formula 1

Why Williams harbours ‘shared frustration’ with Carlos Sainz over 2025 F1 setbacks

August 6, 2025

Follow Motorsport Week

Join our daily motorsport newsletter

* indicates required

Motorsport Week

© 2024 Motorsport Media Services Ltd

Other Links

  • About & Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Motorsport Monday

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Home
  • Formula 1
    • Latest News
    • 2025 F1 Calendar
    • 2025 F1 Championship Standings
  • Formula E
    • Latest News
    • 2025 FE Calendar
    • 2025 FE Championship Standings
  • MotoGP
    • Latest News
    • 2025 MotoGP Calendar
    • 2025 MotoGP Standings
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
  • WRC
    • Latest News
    • 2025 WRC Calendar
    • 2025 WRC Standings
  • IndyCar
    • Latest News
    • 2025 IndyCar Calendar
    • 2025 IndyCar Standings
  • WEC
    • Latest News
    • 2025 WEC Calendar
  • Live Updates
  • Other
    • IMSA
    • Formula 2
    • Formula 3
    • F1 Academy
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
  • Galleries
  • About/Contact
  • Privacy Policy

© 2024 Motorsport Media Services Ltd