Verstappen frustrated as F1 rules face major rethink
Sunday will be the first race Max Verstappen hasn't started on pole at Suzuka since 2019

Verstappen frustrated as F1 rules face major rethink

Verstappen’s frustration boils over

Max Verstappen admitted he has “a lot of stuff to personally figure out” after qualifying 11th for the Japanese Grand Prix—a shocking result for a driver who has dominated at Suzuka in recent years.

The Red Bull Racing star’s comments reflect deeper concerns—not just about performance, but about the direction of Formula 1 itself.

From dominance to doubt

Verstappen’s struggles highlight a dramatic shift:

  • Won the last five Japanese Grands Prix
  • Now starts outside the top 10
  • Beaten by team-mate Isack Hadjar

Meanwhile, pole position went to rising star Kimi Antonelli of Mercedes-AMG Petronas.

The core issue: new engine rules

Lando Norris qualified 0.631s behind polesitter Kimi Antonelli of Mercedes
Lando Norris qualified 0.631s behind polesitter Kimi Antonelli of Mercedes

The 2026 regulations introduced:

  • 50% electric / 50% combustion power split
  • Heavy reliance on energy management

Drivers say this has changed the nature of driving:

Cars lose power mid-straight

Drivers must lift earlier into corners

Risk-taking is penalised instead of rewarded

Verstappen has previously compared the experience to:

“Mario Kart” and “Formula E on steroids”

Drivers vs the rules

Several top drivers voiced concerns:

Lando Norris

  • “It hurts your soul” losing speed on straights

Lewis Hamilton

  • Energy deployment issues costing lap time
  • “Not ideal… rules aren’t so great”

Charles Leclerc

  • Pushing the limit now punished heavily

Carlos Sainz

  • “Not good enough for F1”

Why Suzuka exposed the problem

Charles Leclerc is third in the drivers' championship after the first two races of the season
Charles Leclerc is third in the drivers’ championship after the first two races of the season

The iconic Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka is known for:

  • High-speed corners
  • Technical precision
  • Rewarding bravery

But now:

  • Drivers manage battery, not speed
  • Corners like Degner and Spoon lose their challenge
  • Qualifying becomes less about pure skill

Rule changes coming?

F1’s governing body (FIA) has acknowledged the issue.

Planned actions:

  • Post-race meeting to review rules
  • Focus on fixing qualifying dynamics
  • Maintain positives like better racing & overtaking

The challenge:

Fix qualifying without harming race action

A balancing act for F1

The current regulations have brought:

Positives

  • Closer racing
  • More overtaking

Negatives

  • Reduced driver freedom
  • Less rewarding risk-taking
  • Artificial energy constraints

Final thoughts

For Max Verstappen, this is more than a bad qualifying—it’s a philosophical conflict with modern F1.

The sport now faces a key question:

Should Formula 1 prioritise efficiency and strategy… or raw driving skill?

The answer could shape the future of the sport—and determine whether drivers like Verstappen still feel at home in it.

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