Max Verstappen pledges future to Red Bull despite Mercedes rumours

Max Verstappen has scotched ­conjecture that he would be leaving Red Bull next season by definitively stating he would be with the team in 2025, despite repeated rumours that he is considering a move to Mercedes.

 

Lewis Hamilton is set to leave Mercedes at the end of this season to join Ferrari and his current team have been open about their desire to persuade Verstappen, now a three-time world champion, to join them, despite the Dutchman being ­contracted to Red Bull until 2028. The Mercedes team principal, Toto Wolff, has said he would want to bring the best driver to the team and made no secret of his admiration of Verstappen, who has won seven out of 10 races this season.

 

“Yes, we’re already also working on next year’s car,” he said. “When you’re very focused on that, that means that you’re also driving for the team.”

 

There had been no little debate on the subject and Verstappen had been pressed for a definitive answer because often his replies have been somewhat open to interpretation, as was the case again at the Red Bull Ring.

 

“It’s most important just that we have a very competitive car for the future,” he had said earlier when asked about his future.

 

“At the moment, of course, it’s very tight, but we are working very well as a team to try and improve more. We are working and focusing also on next year to try and be competitive again.”

 

Hamilton was upbeat at the circuit in Austria, buoyed by his first podium of the season at the last round in Spain, when he took third place, behind Verstappen and McLaren’s Lando Norris. It was comfortably his best race of the year and indicative of the strides Mercedes have made with the sequence of upgrades they have brought to recent meetings.

 

“There is a great energy within the team knowing we finally have the direction that we need to be ­working towards,” Hamilton said. “The energy back in the factory, they have a spring in their step, for me it feels good to be back in competitive positions.”