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New Red Bull driver Yuki Tsunoda doesn’t expect the tricky characteristics of the team’s Formula 1 car to be a problem for him.

Tsunoda has earned promotion to Red Bull’s main outfit from the Japanese Grand Prix onwards after Liam Lawson spectacularly failed to get up to speed with the delicate RB21 machine, while the Japanese racer had a convincing first couple of F1 rounds with Racing Bulls in 2025 – though strategy miscalculations prevented him from scoring Sunday points.

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Max Verstappen’s previous four team-mates – including Pierre Gasly, Alexander Albon and Sergio Perez – all struggled to make the most of Red Bull’s oversteery F1 cars, with much emphasis on the front axle and a nervous rear end requiring quite a specific driving style.

However, Tsunoda seems to believe this challenge has been blown out of proportion, and is confident he can adapt his own driving style to succeed.

Asked how he felt after driving the RB21 in the simulator, Tsunoda said: “Rather than it being an extremely difficult car, I felt that the set-up philosophy was completely different. I had to slightly adjust my approach compared to how I usually set up the car at Racing Bulls.

Yuki Tsunoda at the Red Bull Showrun Taichung

Yuki Tsunoda at the Red Bull Showrun Taichung

Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool

He added: “People often say Red Bull cars tend to have strong front-end grip. I personally love cars that turn aggressively, and in the past, I adapted my driving style to that kind of set-up.

“Racing Bulls traditionally had cars that understeered a bit more, which was challenging for me at first. But I got used to it and it eventually became my norm. Now, the key will be adjusting to Red Bull’s characteristics again, but considering my past experience, I’m not too worried about it.”

Tsunoda is aware, nonetheless, that no midseason switch is ever easy, and is therefore keeping expectations in check for the upcoming race at Suzuka.

Asked whether he could become Japan’s first grand prix winner, Tsunoda admitted: “There’s no guarantee that I’ll be able to maximise my performance in this car just yet. However, since it’s a top team, I believe that if I can extract the car’s full potential, the opportunities will come.

“The key will be how well I can understand the car and maximise its performance within the limited time of FP1. Heading into the Japanese Grand Prix, my goal is to reach Q3 and secure a top 10 finish.”

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In this article

Ben Vinel

Formula 1

Yuki Tsunoda

Red Bull Racing

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The start of the 2025 season may not have gone to plan at Red Bull HQ, but it will still celebrate its successful partnerships with Honda in style at this weekend’s Japanese Grand Prix before the two parties go separate ways.

Marking the 60th anniversary of Honda’s first grand prix win – achieved by Richie Ginther at the 1965 Mexican Grand Prix – Red Bull’s RB21 is donned in a one-off tribute livery sporting Japan’s red and white colours, and with Yuki Tsunoda the manufacturer now also has a homegrown driver in one of the seats.

Read Also:

With a switch to Aston Martin and substantially different engine regulations on the horizon in 2026, this season doesn’t just mark the end of Honda’s Red Bull association, but also that of its hybrid era redemption arc, going from humiliation with McLaren to two constructors’ titles with Red Bull and four driver crowns with Max Verstappen.

Honda re-joined F1 as a manufacturer in 2015, one year into the hybrid era but before it was truly ready to do so. And it showed. The brand’s much-vaunted reunion with McLaren turned into an unmitigated disaster, from both technical and cultural points of view.

Honda arrived in F1 with an extremely ambitious and tightly packaged power unit, a so-called ‘size zero’ concept, which brought with it a spate of problems in terms of both power delivery and reliability, requiring a complete rethink of the engine’s architecture for subsequent seasons.

It was at the Japanese Grand Prix, 10 years ago this year, that the manufacturer faced its biggest humiliation, when Fernando Alonso labelled the brand’s power unit a “GP2 engine” over the team radio after Verstappen flew past on the straight. Along with other internal conflicts and cultural differences, the incident contributed to the irreparable harm to the relationship, and while there were marked signs of progress from Honda, the McLaren deal was terminated after 2017.

Fernando Alonso, McLaren MP4-30 Honda

Fernando Alonso, McLaren MP4-30 Honda

Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images

“From 2015 to 2017, it was a very difficult situation for both Honda and the team,” Honda HRC president Koji Watanabe recalls from the Alonso incident. “It was a particularly frustrating period in our history, and there were times when our relationship was strained. But I think we have become stronger because we overcame that frustration.”

But while McLaren decided to look elsewhere, Red Bull was on the prowl for a works partner of its own as it became increasingly frustrated with Renault. Given Honda’s initial struggles to get up to speed, Red Bull’s decision to first switch to the manufacturer with Toro Rosso in 2018 and subsequently with the main team one year later raised a few eyebrows in the paddock.

“We’ve come to the conclusion that Honda are making good progress on both performance and reliability and we reached the conclusion that purely for technically-driven reasons this is the right move,” Red Bull’s Christian Horner said mid-2018, saying his operation and Honda had cultivated a “healthy working relationship”, something which McLaren hadn’t succeeded in. Honda embedded itself much closer with Red Bull in Milton Keynes, while also inviting key personnel over to its Sakura plant in Japan.

Further proof that both Red Bull and Honda had made strides followed soon enough, with Verstappen taking third on the podium behind the dominant Mercedes in the opening 2019 Australian Grand Prix, dicing with the Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel and Charles Leclerc for third in the championship.

A landmark win arrived in Austria later that year, Honda’s first F1 victory since its 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix triumph with Jenson Button. Speaking to Motorsport.com last year, Watanabe said Verstappen played a key role in helping the relationship between the two parties blossom, with one post-race gesture in Austria particularly endearing himself to the proud Japanese company.

“My biggest memory is him pointing at the Honda logo on the podium in Austria at the Red Bull Ring,” Watanabe said. “I was standing under the podium and that was a very special moment for me. He thanks Honda a lot in public, which is important for all the people working for Honda. It is a very good relationship. We trust each other and we are proud to work together, so we will miss him in the future.”

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, 1st position, celebrates on the podium

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, 1st position, celebrates on the podium

Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images

But while the Red Bull-Honda went from strength to strength, the Japanese brand announced in late 2020 that it would pull out of F1 after 2021, citing costs in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Only after intensive talks the brand agreed to continue supplying engines to both Red Bull teams under the HRC label. Honda was rewarded for sticking with Red Bull with two manufacturers titles in 2022 and 2023, even if the team’s Japanese-built engines officially ran under the Red Bull Powertrains label.

Its final objective was supporting a homegrown driver from its Formula Dream project all the way to a top-line seat in Formula 1, a goal which looked set to fail until just a few weeks ago. But Red Bull’s decision to swap Liam Lawson and Tsunoda has finally given the Japanese driver a chance of a lifetime, even if it is littered with pitfalls in the difficult RB21.

Read Also:

Making the swap before this weekend’s Suzuka race – in a Japanese livery no less – increases the pressure on Tsunoda, but also adds to the appeal for Honda, which is understood to have upped its financial commitment. “At Honda we are committed to developing drivers and riders who can compete on the global stage, and I believe that one of our major goals has been achieved,” Watanabe said. “I am truly happy that Yuki is making his debut with a special livery commemorating the 60th anniversary of our F1 victories, and I sincerely hope he achieves great results.”

Honda’s U-turn on leaving F1 came too late to salvage its Red Bull partnership, with the brand heading to the ambitious Aston Martin project instead. But 10 years on from that dreaded “GP2” humiliation, the Japanese giant can finally say it has come full circle.

In this article

Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Red Bull Racing

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Liam Lawson has revealed that his demotion to Racing Bulls, after just two grands prix at Red Bull in the 2025 Formula 1 season, came as a surprise.

After Lawson struggled at both Melbourne and Shanghai – including qualifying 20th twice in China – Red Bull decided the situation called for an immediate driver swap, giving Racing Bulls driver Yuki Tsunoda a long-awaited chance in the main team.

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Meanwhile, Lawson will strive to put his season back on track after a confidence-sapping stint in Milton Keynes, but having to settle for Racing Bulls again is obviously not what he was hoping for.

“It was definitely a shock, honestly,” Lawson told Sky Sports on Wednesday. “It’s not something that I saw coming.

“The discussions we were having as well, I think, weren’t really leaning in this direction, so it was definitely not something that I expected.”

Red Bull lost the constructors’ title last year due to how weakly Sergio Perez was performing in its second car; the team is in for another tough battle, with a 42-point deficit on championship leader McLaren just two rounds into the season.

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Team principal Christian Horner admitted that the rationale behind the decision was the need for immediate results, although he also insisted on the importance of Lawson’s well-being.

“I think with everything that we saw in Australia and China, you could see that it was really affecting Liam quite badly,” Horner told Sky Sports.

Christian Horner, Team Principal of Oracle Red Bull Racing, Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing RB21

Christian Horner, Team Principal of Oracle Red Bull Racing, Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing RB21

Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool

“We could have left it, and I think that Liam is a driver with talent. Maybe within half a season he would have got there, but we just don’t have that amount of time.

“It was something that was very clear to the engineering side within the team, just how much Liam was struggling with it all, and you could see that weight upon his shoulders.”

On the other hand, Lawson admitted to feeling ‘frustrated’ at not being afforded any more time, especially as Albert Park and Shanghai were two tracks he had not driven on previously, with the latter hosting a sprint weekend – featuring just one practice session.

“The car is hard to drive,” he said. “But we were going through a process of making that adjustment.

“Each session we were going out, we were sort of adjusting or getting used to something that was a little bit unknown. It’s not so much a driving style or something like that. It’s just literally adjusting. And for me, I just didn’t have the time to do that.

“But obviously, it’s not my decision, so I’m here to make the most of this one.”

In this article

Ben Vinel

Formula 1

Yuki Tsunoda

Liam Lawson

Red Bull Racing

RB

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Liam Lawson has revealed his demotion to Racing Bulls, after just two grands prix at Red Bull in the 2025 Formula 1 season, came as a surprise.

After Lawson struggled at both Melbourne and Shanghai – including qualifying 20th twice in China – Red Bull decided the situation called for an immediate driver swap, giving Racing Bulls driver Yuki Tsunoda a long-awaited chance in the main team.

Read Also:

Meanwhile, Lawson will strive to put his season back on track after a confidence-sapping stint in Milton Keynes, but having to settle for Racing Bulls again is obviously not what he was hoping for.

“It was definitely a shock, honestly,” Lawson told Sky Sports on Wednesday. “It’s not something that I saw coming.

“The discussions we were having as well, I think, weren’t really leaning in this direction, so it was definitely not something that I sort of expected.”

Red Bull lost the constructors’ title last year due to how weakly Sergio Perez was performing in its second car; the team is in for another tough battle, with a 42-point deficit on championship leader McLaren just two rounds into the season.

Read Also:

Team principal Christian Horner admitted that the rationale behind the decision was the need for immediate results, although he also insisted on the importance of Lawson’s well-being.

“I think with everything that we saw in Australia and China, you could see that it was really affecting Liam quite badly,” Horner told Sky Sports.

Christian Horner, Team Principal of Oracle Red Bull Racing, Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing RB21

Christian Horner, Team Principal of Oracle Red Bull Racing, Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing RB21

Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool

“We could have left it, and I think that Liam is a driver with talent. Maybe within half a season he would have got there, but we just don’t have that amount of time.

“It was something that was very clear to the engineering side within the team, just how much Liam was struggling with it all, and you could see that weight upon his shoulders.”

On the other hand, Lawson admitted to feeling ‘frustrated’ at not being afforded any more time, especially as Albert Park and Shanghai were two tracks he had not driven on previously, with the latter hosting a sprint weekend – featuring just one practice session.

“The car is hard to drive,” he said. “But we were going through a process of making that adjustment.

“Each session we were going out, we were sort of adjusting or getting used to something that was a little bit unknown. It’s not so much a driving style or something like that. It’s just literally adjusting. And for me, I just didn’t have the time to do that.

“But obviously, it’s not my decision, so I’m here to make the most of this one.”

In this article

Ben Vinel

Formula 1

Liam Lawson

Yuki Tsunoda

Red Bull Racing

Racing Bulls

Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics

The start of the 2025 season may not have gone to plan at Red Bull HQ, but it will still celebrate its successful partnerships with Honda in style at this weekend’s Japanese Grand Prix before the two parties go separate ways.

Marking the 60th anniversary of Honda’s first grand prix win – achieved by Richie Ginther at the 1965 Mexican Grand Prix – Red Bull’s RB21 is donned in a one-off tribute livery sporting Japan’s red and white colours, and with Yuki Tsunoda the manufacturer now also has a homegrown driver in one of the seats.

With a switch to Aston Martin and substantially different engine regulations on the horizon in 2026, this season doesn’t just mark the end of Honda’s Red Bull association, but also that of its hybrid era redemption arc, going from humiliation with McLaren to two constructors’ titles with Red Bull and four driver crowns with Max Verstappen.

Honda re-joined F1 as a manufacturer in 2015, one year into the hybrid era but before it was truly ready to do so. And it showed. The brand’s much-vaunted reunion with McLaren turned into an unmitigated disaster, both from a technical and cultural point of view.

Honda arrived in F1 with an extremely ambitious and tightly packaged power unit, a so-called ‘size zero’ concept, which brought with it a spate of problems both in terms of power delivery and reliability, requiring a complete re-think of the engine’s architecture for subsequent seasons.

It was at the Japanese Grand Prix, 10 years ago this year, that the manufacturer faced its biggest humiliation, when Fernando Alonso labelled the brand’s power unit a “GP2 engine” over the team radio after Verstappen flew past on the straight. Along with other internal conflicts and cultural differences, the incident contributed to the irreparable harm to the relationship, and while there were marked signs of progress from Honda, the McLaren deal was terminated after 2017.

Fernando Alonso, McLaren MP4-30 Honda

Fernando Alonso, McLaren MP4-30 Honda

Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images

“From 2015 to 2017, it was a very difficult situation for both Honda and the team,” Honda HRC president Koji Watanabe remembers the Alonso incident. “It was a particularly frustrating period in our history, and there were times when our relationship was strained. But I think we have become stronger because we overcame that frustration.”

But while McLaren decided to look elsewhere, Red Bull was on the prowl for a works partner of its own as it became increasingly frustrated with Renault. Given Honda’s initial struggles to get up to speed, Red Bull’s decision to first switch to the manufacturer with Toro Rosso in 2018 and subsequently with the main team one year later raised a few eyebrows in the paddock.

“We’ve come to the conclusion that Honda are making good progress on both performance and reliability and we reached the conclusion that purely for technically-driven reasons this is the right move,” Red Bull’s Christian Horner said mid-2018, saying his operation and Honda had cultivated a “healthy working relationship”, something which McLaren hadn’t succeeded in. Honda embedded itself much closer with Red Bull in Milton Keynes, while also inviting key personnel over to its Sakura plant in Japan.

Further proof that both Red Bull and Honda had made strides followed soon enough, with Verstappen taking third on the podium behind the dominant Mercedes in the opening 2019 Australian Grand Prix, dicing with the Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel and Charles Leclerc for third in the championship.

A landmark win arrived in Austria later that year, Honda’s first grand prix victory since its 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix triumph with Jenson Button. Speaking to Autosport last year, Watanabe said Verstappen played a key role in helping the relationship between the two parties blossom, with one post-race gesture in Austria particularly endearing himself to the proud Japanese company.

“My biggest memory is him pointing at the Honda logo on the podium in Austria at the Red Bull Ring,” Watanabe said. “I was standing under the podium and that was a very special moment for me. He thanks Honda a lot in public, which is important for all the people working for Honda. It is a very good relationship. We trust each other and we are proud to work together, so we will miss him in the future.”

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, 1st position, celebrates on the podium

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, 1st position, celebrates on the podium

Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images

But while the Red Bull-Honda went from strength to strength, the Japanese brand announced in late 2020 that it would pull out of F1 after 2021, citing costs in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Only after intensive talks the brand agreed to continue supplying engines to both Red Bull teams under the HRC label. Honda was rewarded for sticking with Red Bull with two manufacturers titles in 2022 and 2023, even if the team’s Japanese-built engines officially ran under the Red Bull Powertrains label.

Its final objective was supporting a homegrown driver from its Formula Dream project all the way to a top-line seat in Formula 1, a goal which looked set to fail until just a few weeks ago. But Red Bull’s decision to swap Liam Lawson and Tsunoda has finally given the Japanese driver a chance of a lifetime, even if it is littered with pitfalls in the difficult RB21.

Making the swap before this weekend’s Suzuka race – in a Japanese livery no less – increases the pressure on Tsunoda, but also adds to the appeal for Honda, which is understood to have upped its financial commitment. “At Honda we are committed to developing drivers and riders who can compete on the global stage, and I believe that one of our major goals has been achieved,” Watanabe said. “I am truly happy that Yuki is making his debut with a special livery commemorating the 60th anniversary of our F1 victories, and I sincerely hope he achieves great results.”

Honda’s U-turn on leaving F1 came too late to salvage its Red Bull partnership, with the brand heading to the ambitious Aston Martin project instead. But 10 years on from that dreaded “GP2” humiliation, the Japanese giant can finally say it has come full circle.

Read Also:

In this article

Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Red Bull Racing

Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics

The best visualisation of just how different Formula 1 life has become for Valtteri Bottas was formed in 2025 Bahrain pre-season testing, when Autosport found him in the Mercedes pitbox with a wheelgun in his hand.

But the Finn wasn’t starting a new role as a mechanic for the Silver Arrows squad. It’s just that as Mercedes’ 2025 test and reserve driver, filming social media skits is part of the requirement. And that’s something that just comes naturally to Bottas.

Think how his laid-back style has won him a legion of fans in his adopted second home in Australia. Or how, these days, he’s always uploading videos of both his sun-soaked cycling exploits or mouth-watering culinary delights to nearly five million Instagram followers.

It’s not just stockpiling ‘content’ where the quip-tastic 10-time grand prix race winner is of use for the team where he enjoyed the majority of his F1 successes. And there’s something in it for him too. In doing these jobs for Mercedes, Bottas gains a key edge in the race to return to F1 racing action in 2026 – a story that only rarely ends in success for many drivers.

“It’s different, of course – my coffee consumption has gone up!” Bottas tells Autosport of his return to reserve driver life for the first time since he held that position at Williams back in 2012.

“There’s a bit more time to hang around and speak to people. [It’s] less stressful, for sure. Less media than as a race driver, but more events with sponsors and partners. One of my jobs is to do the events you don’t normally want to put the drivers into. Especially evening events. They can put the third driver in there.

“But, yeah, I’m still involved in all the [engineering] meetings. Still following every session on the intercom and TV. Just to keep up to date in case I’ve got to jump in. And in general, if I have any ideas or questions or even a driver’s view on certain things, then I speak up.”

Bottas kept his skills sharp by demonstrating the 1999 BAR 01 at this year's Australian GP

Bottas kept his skills sharp by demonstrating the 1999 BAR 01 at this year’s Australian GP

Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images

At the wet Australian season opener – when Bottas was “following my first grand prix in the garage in the last 12 years” – this included suggesting that Andrea Kimi Antonelli would need to move off-line more regularly to cool his intermediates and indicating the crossover point for moving back off slicks when the rain returned late on in Melbourne.

“It’s quite a big change again from Sauber back to Mercedes,” Bottas explains while sat overlooking the Shanghai paddock pond in the strong late-March Chinese sunshine at F1’s most recent 2025 round.

“Just the quality of engineering and the amount of talented people in one team. There’s still a big difference because it’s a bigger team. Everything just maybe runs a bit smoother because of the bigger capacity and resources, which is something I definitely learned when I came to Mercedes for the first time.

“But apart from that, no big surprises [being back]. Everything is pretty much as I expected. Australia actually went better than I thought. It was OK, but it definitely made me miss racing.

“When we signed with Mercedes [just before Christmas after the 2024 season ended], which was actually quite soon after the Sauber news, I had time to be ready for this kind of different era or role.

“So, yeah, it’s been fine, it’s just obviously I had to again just accept to myself that, ‘OK, yeah, there’s probably not going to be any racing’ [this year]. Of course, you never know, but I’m actually really thankful to Toto [Wolff, Mercedes team boss] for giving me this opportunity again to be part of a great team, a great brand, and I think it’s in a good role.

“And, for me, it’s important to be present, to still keep up to date with what is happening in this sport with a good team, to be able to do some testing. Because I want to be back on the grid. And if I just disappear somewhere… people tend to forget your name.”

Paddock presence can only help Bottas's cause

Paddock presence can only help Bottas’s cause

Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images

And this is Bottas’s key point in returning to Mercedes in a non-racing capacity and appearing in its social media. Remaining a constant paddock presence enhances his chances of getting back on the grid in 2026.

That’s unlikely to be with Mercedes, which has invested much in both George Russell and Antonelli (although both are officially uncontracted beyond 2026) as its current racing line-up. And if Wolff decides to return to trying to woo Max Verstappen out of Red Bull, that reduces Bottas’s already slim chances here even further.

But the 2026 grid is expanding with Cadillac’s entry. It would be logical to expect the newcomer to wish to blend a rookie American or IndyCar driving talent with an experienced F1 hand.

Bottas’s CV fits the mould perfectly, as does that of ex-Red Bull driver Sergio Perez, who has been talked up by Cadillac director Mario Andretti in recent days.

And there’s a lesson for each of them in the tricky task of earning an F1 return – from the driver who in part ousted Bottas from Sauber for 2025.

Back in 2022, Nico Hulkenberg used his position as Aston Martin super-sub and occasional TV pundit to show important paddock figures that he was still suited to be back racing.

Specifically, the German driver badgered former Haas team boss Guenther Steiner into being considered for a 2023 race seat at the American squad.

When things became even harder for Mick Schumacher as 2022 unfurled, it was Hulkenberg’s huge F1 experience that Haas wanted. He then leveraged that into becoming a future Audi works driver with a series of stunning performances across 2023 and into last year.

Bottas is contributing in the Mercedes garage

Bottas is contributing in the Mercedes garage

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

We put this point to Bottas, who agrees that remaining active in the F1 paddock “can make a difference” in the quest to regain a race drive.

“If you’re a driver who’s around versus if you’re a driver who disappears completely, I think it has its positives to be here and to speak to people,” he adds.

“But it’s more I do it for myself. I want to keep up to date with what’s happening with the sport. It’s great to be with a great team, to see how they operate, what kind of gains they’re finding and why. Which can also help me, probably, in the future.

“Also, as a reserve, you’ve got to be here because if you get the call, you want to be ready.”

And does Bottas consider Cadillac his best chance to earn that rare F1 return?

“This season will show,” he replies. “We’ve obviously got many rookie drivers and in this sport, you never know. Something could trigger some changes within different teams and drivers again.

“But for sure, it’s a very interesting option for me. It wouldn’t be an easy route, but if there’s a clear plan of how to get there, then it could be a really interesting project, which I think experience can help. So, let’s wait and see.

I know [Cadillac team principal] Graeme Lowdon well. But I don’t think he’s making all the decisions. In the end, they’ve got a big company backing the project. Again, they’ve got a board and all these things [that make] decisions or at least influence the decisions. This sport is still a business and there are politics involved.

“But, yeah, at least he’s seen me driving alongside Zhou [Guanyu, at Sauber with Bottas from 2022-2024, with Lowdon the Chinese driver’s manager] and he knows what I can do. He knows my past and my experience.”

When we point out to Bottas that Perez is taking the opposite approach of staying away from the paddock, he’ll only insist his way “doesn’t hurt me – let’s put it that way”.

Finally, there’s how Wolff fits into the Bottas return story. The Vienna man is intrinsically linked with the 35-year-old’s career story, after all – managing him for a decade until he first signed to race for Mercedes in 2017 and overseeing all of his F1 wins.

“Toto has told me that he would love to see me racing still,” Bottas concludes. “And I think he agreed with me when I told him that I still feel like I’m not done with the sport yet. It’s not the time yet. So, I think he would be happy to see me in a race seat. And of course, if it’s not here, he wouldn’t stand in the way.”

Did the sun truly set on Bottas's F1 career in Abu Dhabi last year? Time will tell

Did the sun truly set on Bottas’s F1 career in Abu Dhabi last year? Time will tell

Photo by: Lubomir Asenov / Motorsport Images

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics

The best visualisation of just how different Formula 1 life has become for Valtteri Bottas was formed in 2025 Bahrain pre-season testing, when Motorsport.com found him, wheel gun in hand, in the Mercedes pitbox.

But the Finn wasn’t starting a new role as a mechanic for the Silver Arrows squad; it’s just that as Mercedes’ 2025 test and reserve driver, filming social media skits is part of the requirement. And that’s something that just comes naturally to Bottas.

Think how his laid-back style has won him a legion of fans in his adopted second home in Australia. Or how, these days, he’s always uploading videos of both his sun-soaked cycling exploits or mouth-watering culinary delights to nearly five million Instagram followers.

But it’s not just stockpiling ‘content’ where the quip-tastic 10-time grand prix race winner is of use for the team which he enjoyed the majority of his F1 successes with. And it’s in doing these jobs for Mercedes that Bottas gains a key edge in the race to return to F1 racing action in 2026 – a story that only rarely ends in success for drivers.

“It’s different, of course – my coffee consumption has gone up!” Bottas tells Motorsport.com of his return to reserve driver life for the first time since he held that position at Williams back in 2012.

“There’s a bit more time to hang around and speak to people. [It’s] less stressful, for sure. Less media than as a race driver, but then more events with sponsors and partners. One of my jobs is to do the events, especially evening events, that normally you don’t want to put the drivers into. So, they can put the third driver in there.

“But, yeah, still involved in all the [engineering] meetings.  Still following every session on the intercom and TV. Just to keep up to date in case I’ve got to jump in. And also in general, if I have any ideas or questions or even a driver’s view on certain things, then I speak up.”

Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes

Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

At the wet Australian season opener – when Bottas was “following my first grand prix in the garage in the last 12 years” – this included suggesting that Andrea Kimi Antonelli would need to move off-line more regularly to cool his intermediates and indicating the crossover point for moving back off slicks when the rain returned late on in Melbourne.

Read Also:

“It’s quite a big change again from Sauber back to Mercedes,” Bottas explains, sat overlooking the Shanghai paddock pond in the strong late-March Chinese sunshine at F1’s most recent 2025 round.

“Just the quality of engineering and the amount of talented people in one team. There’s still a big difference because it’s a bigger team. Everything just maybe runs a bit smoother because of the bigger capacity and resources, which is something I definitely learned when I came to Mercedes for the first time.

“But apart from that, like no big surprises [being back]. Everything is pretty much as I expected. Australia actually went better than I thought. It was ok, but it definitely made me miss racing.

“When we signed with Mercedes [just before Christmas after the 2024 season ended], which was actually quite quickly after the Sauber news, I had time to be ready for this kind of different era or role.

“So, yeah, it’s been fine, it’s just obviously I had to again just accept to myself that, ‘ok, yeah, there’s probably not going to be any racing’ [this year]. Of course, you never know, but I’m actually really thankful to Toto [Wolff, Mercedes team boss] for giving me this opportunity again to be part of a great team, great brand, and I think it’s in a good role.

“And, for me, it’s important to be present, to still keep up to date with what is happening in this sport with a good team, to be able to do some testing. Because I want to be back on the grid. And if I would just disappear somewhere – people tend to forget your name.”

Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes

Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes

Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images

And this is Bottas’s key point in returning to Mercedes away from racing and appearing as its social media presence. By remaining a constant paddock presence, he enhances his chances of getting back on the grid in 2026.

That’s unlikely to be with Mercedes, which has invested much in both George Russell and Antonelli (although both are officially uncontracted beyond 2026) as its current racing line-up. And if Wolff decides to return to trying to woo Max Verstappen out of Red Bull, that reduces Bottas’s already slim chances here even further.

But the 2026 grid is expanding with Cadillac’s coming entry, where it would be logical to expect the newcomer to wish to blend a rookie American or IndyCar driving talent with an experienced F1 hand.

Bottas’s CV fits the mould perfectly, as does ex-Red Bull driver Sergio Perez, who has been talked up by Cadillac director Mario Andretti in recent days.

And there’s a lesson for each of them in the tricky task of earning an F1 return – from the driver who in part ousted Bottas from Sauber for 2025.

Back in 2022, Nico Hulkenberg used his position as Aston Martin super-sub and occasional TV pundit to show important paddock figures that he was still suited to be back racing. Specifically, the German driver badged former Haas team boss Guenther Steiner into being considered for a 2023 race seat at the American squad.

When things became even harder for Mick Schumacher as 2022 unfurled, it was Hulkenberg’s massive F1 experience that Haas wanted. He then leveraged that into becoming a future Audi works driver with a series of stunning performances across 2023 and into last year.

Nico Hulkenberg, Kick Sauber

Nico Hulkenberg, Kick Sauber

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

We put this point to Bottas, who agrees that remaining active in the F1 paddock “can make a difference” in the quest to regain a race drive.

“If you’re a driver who’s around versus if you’re a driver who disappears completely, I think it has its positives to be here and to speak to people,” he adds.

“But it’s more I do it for myself. I want to keep up to date what’s happening with the sport. It’s great to be with a great team, to see how they operate, what kind of gains they’re finding and why. Which can also help me, probably, in the future.

“Also, as a reserve, you’ve got to be here because if you get the call, you want to be ready.”

And does Bottas consider Cadillac his best chance to earn that rare F1 return?

“This season will show,” he replies. “We’ve obviously got many rookie drivers and in this sport, you never know. Something can trigger again some changes within different teams and drivers.

“But it’s, for sure, for me, a very interesting option. It wouldn’t be an easy route, but if there’s a clear plan of how to get there, then it could be a really interesting project, which I think experience can help. So, let’s wait and see.

“I know [Cadillac team principal] Graeme Lowdon well. But I don’t think he’s making all the decisions. In the end, they’ve got a big company backing the project. Again, they’ve got a board and all these things, who make decisions or at least influence the decisions as this sport is still a business and there are politics involved. 

“But, yeah, at least he’s seen me driving alongside Zhou [Guanyu, at Sauber with Bottas from 2022-24, with Lowdon the Chinese driver’s manager] and he knows what I can do. He knows my past and my experience.”

Sergio Perez, Red Bull Racing

Sergio Perez, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool

When we point out to Bottas that Perez is taking the opposite approach of staying away from the paddock, he’ll only insist his way “doesn’t hurt me – let’s put it that way”.

Finally, there’s how Wolff fits into the Bottas return story. He’s intrinsically linked with the 35-year-old career story, after all – managing him for a decade until he first signed to race for Mercedes in 2017 and overseeing all of his F1 wins.

“He has told me that he would love to see me racing still,” Bottas concludes. “And I think he agreed with me when I told him that I still feel like I’m not done with the sport yet. It’s not the time yet. So, I think he would be happy to see me in a race seat. And of course, if it’s not here, he wouldn’t stand in the way.”

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Sergio Perez

Valtteri Bottas

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Log in to your F1 Fantasy account this week and you will be greeted with a warning message prompting changes to your team.

“Action required: Yuki Tsunoda and Liam Lawson have changed race teams. If you currently have either driver in your team you will need to use your transfer allowance to avoid “inactive driver” penalties.”

No one wants to be hit with penalties in F1, just ask the Ferrari pair of Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc after both were disqualified from the Chinese Grand Prix for car infringements.

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That means one of the two free transfers for a player with either Lawson or Tsunoda in their squad is lost to correcting the issue – unless said player has a feeling Red Bull might switch the duo back again in the coming weeks!

Tsunoda will set you back $16.4million – exactly double the cost of Lawson in the Racing Bulls team – and given the respective start to the season of the junior team and the fact the ousted Kiwi will clearly have a point to prove, Lawson could make for a shrewd addition this time around.

As ever, we asked a pair of Motorsport.com writers to give us their expert* input ahead of the deadline for transfers.

Ruben Zimmermann, Editor, Motorsport.com Germany, ‘RZ Racing’: “I lost a lot of points in China because of the double Ferrari disqualification. As I’m still annoyed about that, Ferrari is out this time!

“Instead, I’ve opted for a cheaper team with Racing Bulls in order to free up budget for Oscar Piastri, who will be my spearhead in Japan. I had to change something on the driver side anyway, because I previously had Tsunoda in the team.

Oscar Piastri, McLaren

Oscar Piastri, McLaren

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

“Apart from that, I’m sticking with Alex Albon, Fernando Alonso, who I hope will finally finish a race, and the two Sauber drivers as low-cost alternatives. My second (and most important) team remains McLaren, as in Australia and China. Hopefully they won’t be disqualified this time…”

Hannah Newman, writer, ‘Bortolet’s go!’: “Off the back of Piastri’s fantastic performance in China, I have decided to replace Lando Norris with his McLaren team-mate, both based on my confidence in the Aussie driver and to free up some funds elsewhere.

“I’ve also switched Williams drivers – Carlos Sainz out for Albon as Albon’s performances have been fantastic recently. I have faith Sainz will be fighting up with his team-mate soon, but for now Albon seems to have the upper hand.

“RB has been replaced in favour of Williams due to the Grove-based outfit’s strong start to the season. While I do think RB will perform well this weekend, especially in qualifying, their race strategies need work.”

Check back on Motorsport.com on Monday for an update on the top of the leaderboard following the Japanese Grand Prix, also previewing the fourth round of the season in Bahrain.

Still yet to join our league? It is not too late! Join HERE.

*might not be deemed expert by Sunday evening

In this article

Mark Mann-Bryans

Formula 1

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New Red Bull driver Yuki Tsunoda doesn’t expect the tricky characteristics of the team’s Formula 1 car to be a problem for him.

Tsunoda has earned promotion to Red Bull’s main outfit from the Japanese Grand Prix onwards after Liam Lawson spectacularly failed to get up to speed with the delicate RB21 machine, while the Japanese racer had a convincing first couple of F1 rounds with Racing Bulls in 2025 – though strategy miscalculations prevented him from scoring Sunday points.

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Max Verstappen’s previous four team-mates – including Pierre Gasly, Alexander Albon and Sergio Perez – all struggled to make the most of Red Bull’s oversteery F1 cars, with much emphasis on the front axle and a nervous rear end requiring quite a specific driving style.

However, Tsunoda seems to believe this challenge has been blown out of proportion, and is confident he can adapt his own driving style to succeed.

Asked how he felt after driving the RB21 in the simulator, Tsunoda said: “Rather than it being an extremely difficult car, I felt that the set-up philosophy was completely different. I had to slightly adjust my approach compared to how I usually set up the car at Racing Bulls.

Yuki Tsunoda at the Red Bull Showrun Taichung

Yuki Tsunoda at the Red Bull Showrun Taichung

Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool

He added: “People often say Red Bull cars tend to have strong front-end grip. I personally love cars that turn aggressively, and in the past, I adapted my driving style to that kind of set-up.

“Racing Bulls traditionally had cars that understeered a bit more, which was challenging for me at first, but I got used to it, and it eventually became my norm. Now, the key will be adjusting to Red Bull’s characteristics again, but considering my past experience, I’m not too worried about it.”

Tsunoda is aware, nonetheless, that no midseason switch is ever easy, and is therefore keeping expectations in check for the upcoming race in Suzuka.

Asked whether he could become Japan’s first ever grand prix winner, Tsunoda admitted: “There’s no guarantee that I’ll be able to maximize my performance in this car just yet. However, since it’s a top team, I believe that if I can extract the car’s full potential, the opportunities will come.

“The key will be how well I can understand the car and maximize its performance within the limited time of FP1. Heading into the Japanese Grand Prix, my goal is to reach Q3 and secure a top 10 finish.”

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In this article

Ben Vinel

Formula 1

Yuki Tsunoda

Red Bull Racing

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Honda Racing Corporation president Koji Watanabe says Yuki Tsunoda’s Formula 1 future at Red Bull lies in his own hands, with the Japanese brand undertaking a new project with the Aston Martin outfit in the world championship.

Tsunoda has received a long elusive promotion to Red Bull’s main team for the Japanese Grand Prix; the Milton Keynes-based squad made the drastic call of an early-season driver swap with its ‘junior’ team Racing Bulls after semi-rookie Liam Lawson glaringly underperformed in the RB21 over the opening two grands prix of 2025.

Tsunoda’s future with the Austrian brand had seemed uncertain after he again failed to earn a call-up to the Red Bull outfit for 2025, but he now has a chance to prove that he can be closer to team-mate Max Verstappen than the Dutchman’s predecessors.

The 24-year-old is a product of Honda’s young driver programme, but the Japanese manufacturer is starting a new partnership with Aston Martin for F1’s new technical era in 2026. However, Watanabe is adamant that Honda won’t influence Tsunoda’s future at Red Bull in any way.

“Our partnership with Red Bull will conclude this year, so we have no leverage to pressure Red Bull regarding 2026,” Watanabe said. “He earned his promotion to Red Bull based on his performance, so he must continue proving himself to remain there in the coming years. The most important thing is his own will – since he wants to continue with Red Bull, we have no reason to interfere.”

Koji Watanabe, Honda Racing CEO

Koji Watanabe, Honda Racing CEO

Photo by: Motorsport.com Japan

Watanabe also clarified that Honda had played no part in swaying Red Bull for the driver swap with Lawson to occur.

“We don’t know when or how Red Bull makes [a given] decision, so we always communicate that they should choose the best driver,” he insisted. “I have very good communication with Christian Horner, and we constantly discuss not just driver personnel matters but also trackside support structures. This time, we did not take any special actions.”

Tsunoda’s first race weekend with Red Bull happens to be his and Honda’s home grand prix at Suzuka, which he describes as ideal despite potential added pressure.

“This is the ultimate situation,” Tsunoda remarked. “Given the seat swap, there’s naturally pressure from Red Bull, and Honda also has strong expectations for their home grand prix.

“This is a rare and unique moment where multiple challenges and pressures are coming together, and I think it’s the best kind of situation. I don’t know if I’ll ever get to experience something like this again, so I just want to enjoy it.”

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In this article

Ben Vinel

Formula 1

Yuki Tsunoda

Red Bull Racing

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