In a recent revelation, Adrian Newey, former Chief Technical Officer of Red Bull, pointed fingers at ‘inexperience’ as the root cause of the challenges faced by the team in the 2024 Formula 1 season. However, Pierre Wache, Red Bull’s Technical Director, has counteracted Newey’s claims stating that such remarks don’t alter the reality on the ground.
The 2024 season saw Red Bull’s RB20 begin on a high note, dominating the competition. However, the tide turned around the 6th round in Miami, where the competition, exemplified by Lando Norris’s first Grand Prix victory for McLaren, caught up, causing a stumble in Red Bull’s stride.
This turning point coincided with Newey’s departure from the squad. In an interview with Auto Motor und Sport, Newey noted the developmental issues that were brewing in the Red Bull camp late in 2023. He attributed these to ‘inexperience’, implying that the team doggedly continued on a problematic path.
Red Bull’s team Principal, Christian Horner, seemed unfazed by Newey’s comments when confronted by the media during the F1 75 season launch event. Similarly, Wache remained unperturbed, stating, “I don’t take it personally, and maybe it’s true. It doesn’t change anything, I think what you have to learn… this type of comment, for me, doesn’t matter.”
What really matters to Wache is the learning curve that the team has embarked on after the 2024 pitfalls. Red Bull’s dominant streak in 2023, where it claimed victory in 21 out of 22 GPs, didn’t offer many learning opportunities, making the 2024 slump even more challenging. However, the team appears to have bounced back, with Max Verstappen securing wins in Interlagos and Qatar, signaling a triumph over the design flaws.
Wache admitted, “We didn’t do a good enough job last year, and we lost ground in terms of performance – maybe by experience, maybe by misunderstanding some stuff, and we tried to correct it.” He believes that obstacles and failures provide the most significant learning opportunities, adding that rectifying a problem is the most fulfilling part of their job.
Wache’s professional approach to criticism is commendable. He said, “Personally, it doesn’t affect me. From my point of view, my job is not personal. My job is to make sure, in an engineering competition, I’m more affected by the fact that we are not good enough and losing, than a personal comment about myself.”
It’s clear that the team is looking forward, with Verstappen urging Red Bull to move on from the Newey era and focus on the future. As the dynamics of the team evolve, it remains to be seen how they tackle future challenges and leverage their lessons from the past.