Max Verstappen has demanded “a few days to reset” following his high-profile crash out of the Formula 1 British Grand Prix.
Verstappen is enduring a torrid 2026 season, battling with cars he has openly blasted as “Formula E on steroids”, far from a fan of the racing the cars produce.
Compounding his woes is the RB22’s inherent lack of pace and reliability, which has seen the four-time world champion fall away from the front of the grid.
Reduced to fighting for points in the mid to lower end of the top ten owing to the car’s uncompetitiveness, he now has an unenviable streak.
His rear wing has failed twice in two consecutive race weekends, in qualifying in Austria, which ended his hopes of a decent grid position, and then again in the race at the British GP one race later.
The Silverstone failure proved especially alarming, with Verstappen fortunate to keep the car out of the barriers as the wing let go, and he did not hold back afterwards in describing the component as unsafe. It marked the second mechanical gremlin to derail a Verstappen weekend inside a fortnight, and further underlined the scale of the job facing Red Bull as they try to arrest a difficult campaign.
As a result, a crisis of confidence is rumoured to be growing around the Verstappen camp, with the Dutchman’s much-publicised escape clause close to being activated should he be out of the top two in the standings after the summer break reference point.
The maths do him no favours. Following his retirement at Silverstone, Verstappen sits on 76 points in the drivers’ championship, some way adrift of George Russell in second and Lewis Hamilton in third, meaning even a maximum points haul across the remaining races before the break would likely leave him outside the top two.
Should that scenario play out, the clause is understood to open the door for Verstappen to walk away from Red Bull for 2027, a prospect that has hung over the team since he pushed for the get-out during contract talks amid his early unease about the 2026 regulations.
Verstappen has fuelled speculation further by offering a pessimistic outlook to Red Bull’s hopes at present, and hinting he needs time away from the team.
“It would be a very zen person to be optimistic at the moment, given what happened again this weekend,” Verstappen said to media, including Motorsport Week.
“I’m sorry, but it’s just like that.
“I need a few days, I think, to reset and try again.”

Max Verstappen not blaming Red Bull
Despite the speculation surrounding his future and his clear displeasure at the situation at Red Bull, Verstappen was also quick to not blame his team for its fall from grace.
“Everyone is trying their best,” he said.
“I’m not blaming one person or whatever. It’s just painful for everyone that this is happening.”
New team principal Laurent Mekies, who replaced Christian Horner earlier in the year, faces the task of steadying the ship through a season that has repeatedly tested Verstappen’s patience, with reliability now added to the list of concerns alongside the car’s raw pace deficit to the front-running teams.









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