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Verstappen ‘fed up’ after ‘super dangerous’ Silverstone demise

Max Verstappen’s British Grand Prix weekend began in a cloud of vocal dissatisfaction, and it concluded in the exact same manner: with the four-time world champion trapped in a state of absolute dejection.

What took place between the opening practice sessions and the checkered flag at Silverstone was a weekend of agonizing predictability, ending in a high-speed exit that left the Dutchman entirely out of patience with Red Bull's current competitive tailspin.

    The warning signs were flashed early. After an uphill qualifying session, Verstappen had strongly urged his team to swap out his problematic power unit. He went as far as suggesting that if they had to violate parc fermé regulations and start from the pit lane to overhaul the car's setup, it would be a price well worth paying.

    Red Bull ultimately chose to ignore the plea, keeping him in his seventh-place grid slot – a decision that instantly ignited the driver's fuse.

    When asked by Dutch broadcaster Viaplay why his car remained unaltered on the grid, a blunt Verstappen countered: "You have to ask the team. I would much rather have started from the pitlane because the race was exactly the same.

    “I told them: 'We'll just see the same thing again in the race.' And that's exactly what happened, just like in qualifying."

    In contention for an undeserved podium

    Despite carrying a troubled car, Verstappen somehow found himself fighting near the front as rivals encountered problems of their own.

    For a while, a podium appeared possible – but even that prospect failed to convince him that Red Bull had turned a corner.

    "We were lucky, of course, with everything that happened around me – with the penalty for Lewis, a slow puncture for George, Kimi's problem,” Verstappen explained.

    "Even if we would have finished on the podium, I mean, you take it, but it's not deserved at all. Because on the hard tyres we were really slow. I don't know how I kept George and Lewis behind for so long."

    "The whole weekend I had a terrible balance, no top speed compared to the other car in the garage as well. And then the race was exactly the same, which I already predicted."

    The podium never came. Instead, Verstappen's race ended in dramatic fashion when he lost control through Stowe after suffering another rear-wing-related failure, extinguishing what little positivity remained from an already bruising weekend.

    Another failure, another warning

    The crash immediately reminded Verstappen of another painful episode last week in Spielberg, only this time he believes the consequences could have been far worse.

    "It was like Austria," he added. "A different fault, let's say, but the same outcome.

    “So again, while turning into the corner, the rear wing is not fully attaching. And you lose a lot of downforce because of that. You just spin off the track."

    For Verstappen, the concern stretches beyond lost points.

    "Well, at that point it's super dangerous, because you can really hurt yourself, two times," he insisted. "I was lucky in Austria, I was lucky here, but that's why you get really fed up with it."

    His assessment paints a bleak picture of Red Bull's current state. Between recurring power unit concerns, balance deficiencies and now repeated rear-wing failures, Verstappen sees a team wrestling with problems on multiple fronts rather than making meaningful progress.

    That reality has drained almost all optimism from the four-time world champion.

    "I mean, I would be a very zen person to be optimistic at the moment with what happened again this weekend," he said.

    "I'm sorry, but it's just like that. I mean, I need a few days, I think, to reset and try again."

    Read also:

    Verstappen fears British GP struggle: ‘No point to race like this’

    Perhaps the most telling remark came when Verstappen was asked whether he planned to sit down with Red Bull's senior management before the next round at Spa-Francorchamps.

    His response suggested the emotional toll of another disastrous weekend had already reached its limit.

    "To be honest, I don't want anything to do with it for a while,” he concluded.

    For Verstappen, Silverstone did not merely end with another retirement. It reinforced every fear he carried into the weekend.

    He predicted the problems, lived through them once again, and ultimately walked away with the same overwhelming feeling that greeted him after qualifying: dejection.

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