Why Red Bull is ‘not worried’ by high-profile F1 staff departures
Red Bull CEO Oliver Mintzlaff is adamant that he is "not worried" despite key figures leaving its F1 team in the last couple of seasons.
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Red Bull CEO Oliver Mintzlaff is adamant that he is "not worried" despite key figures leaving its F1 team in the last couple of seasons.
My moment of the year has to be Lando Norris claiming his maiden F1 title.
My moment of the year was at the season finale in Abu Dhabi.
Standing in the pit lane in Las Vegas on a cold, wet Friday night, I watched Lando Norris ‘steal’ pole position from Max Verstappen.
My moment of the 2025 F1 season has to be the post-race announcement that both the McLarens had been disqualified in Las Vegas.
My moment of the 2025 F1 season was undoubtedly Carlos Sainz's maiden podium for Williams in Baku.
For me, the moment of the entire F1 season in 2025 was Isack Hadjar’s development, culminating in his maiden podium finish.
It was an F1 season with an intriguing title battle, but there unfortunately weren’t a huge number of standout Grands Prix or scintillating moments.
Lewis Hamilton’s debut F1 campaign with Ferrari didn’t live up to the expectations that greeted his move to the team, not even close.
Motorsport prides itself on pushing boundaries, yet sometimes it gets mired in familiar roadblocks: data bottlenecks, spotty real time decision pipelines, and the challenge of keeping fans genuinely engaged.