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Verstappen reveals size of Renault F1 engine deficit

Max Verstappen says Red Bull’s engine power deficit to Mercedes and Ferrari is “painful” at the Brazilian Grand Prix, where he was unable to compete for pole position.

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB13

Charles Coates / Motorsport Images

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB13
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB13
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB13
Daniel Ricciardo, Red Bull Racing RB13 celebrates in parc ferme
Daniel Ricciardo, Red Bull Racing RB13
Daniel Ricciardo, Red Bull Racing RB13
Daniel Ricciardo, Red Bull Racing RB13

Valtteri Bottas narrowly beat the Ferraris of Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen to the top spot on the grid, while Verstappen was six tenths of a second back in fourth.

“I looked at the GPS data and we’re definitely missing half a second on the straights – and that’s the gap,” Verstappen said after qualifying.

“We could improve the balance a little bit, but looking at it afterwards, it was still not too bad compared to the pole guys.

“We knew it was going to be more painful on this track and I think it showed again.

“If you look at sector two, where the corners are, we only lacked eight hundredths and there is still a bit of a straight going on.

“Maybe just one or two corners where we could have been a bit better, and the rest, we lost out on the straight. There are not that many corners on this track so it’s a bit painful.

"In the race we should be closer, but if it’s going to be close enough, I’m not sure.”

Verstappen dismissed any concerns about his engine’s reliability, saying “If it blows, it blows”, and joking that “It will be good to me, otherwise I’ll punch it!”

Ricciardo: Saturday pace a "mystery"

Teammate Daniel Ricciardo described his inability to improve from Friday to Saturday of a grand prix weekend as “a bit of a mystery”.

He also said he felt the soft tyre – which he progressed from Q2 with – was better than the supersoft compound.

“When we’re looking for those few more tenths when the track ramps up, we don’t have it,” said Ricciardo, who was one second off the pace in Q3.

“It kind of felt like the soft was better for me, I wish I would’ve had more sets in Q3 and left the supersoft at home.

“Normally from a soft to supersoft you gain front grip – the supersoft is easier to get the bite.

“But if anything, that was the problem with my supersoft, I had less on the front, so it was frustrating.

“I sat with the engineers and we’re looking into it, we had a pretty big vibration on the second set in Q3 – why, we don’t know.

“The first run in Q3, we were just slow, and at the moment not sure why.”

Additional reporting by Lawrence Barretto and Oleg Karpov

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