ADRIAN NEWEY TALKS THE RED BULL RB18

Adrian Newey is God!!! In Formula One terms he most certainly is.

His car designs have crossed the finishing line first on 193 occasions.  He knows his stuff from his early days at Leyton House, through his time with Williams and then McLaren.  A mainstay of Red Bull since 2006.  There for the halcyon period and glory days from 2010 to 2013 when Sebastian Vettel took four World Titles.

Fast forward eight years and Max Verstappen triumphed in the Duel in the desert 12 months ago.  A back to back drivers title has since ensued plus their first Constructors Title in almost a decade with 17 wins to boot.

However, having paid second fiddle to Mercedes (as has everybody) for almost a decade, this years Red Bull RB18 has been in a proverbial league of its own despite a sluggish beginning to the campaign. 

But despite the success of the 2021 season, even Red Bull themselves must have been surprised with the performance in 2022, coupled with the new rules and everyone’s favourite nightmare, porpoising….

The man himself talks about ‘THAT’ car.

 “Statistically, obviously, RB18 has been our best car. It’s a car I think we can be very proud of in as much as we had a tight championship battle through 2021, and arguably we put too much resource into that, so you’re not putting it into this brand new car with the new regulations we knew were coming. It’s a difficult balancing act. We focused on trying to get the fundamentals right, including front and rear suspension, the layers, and the radiators. We kind of struggled a little bit with the bounce (porpoising) in pre-season testing. We’d already done a little bit of research and knew roughly what we needed to do to improve it, so when we put the race package on in Bahrain, that catapulted us from definitely behind Ferrari to broadly level. After that, it was a matter of developing it and certainly the second half, we had a fully competitive package.”

Ferrari of course were the kings early on in the 2022 season.  They played a bit of catch up in the Mercedes domination of the Hybrid era.  But that decade of Brackley domination would have got Red Bull to sit up and take notice of (a) the monopoly of success for Mercedes and (b) try to learn from and see how best to match or better then.  A learning curve of sorts for Newey.

“Have a decent engine. We went into the hybrid era, and Renault got it wrong, so that was pretty depressing because you realised that in your foreseeable future if you do a spectacular job, you might snatch the odd win, but you’re never going to win a championship. That was a reset. I think one of the strengths of the team is that we put our heads down and got through that period so that when once we had a good power unit again with a partnership with Honda, we were able to respond.”

The bottom line for Red Bull in 2022 was team work, from the ground up the whole team worked tirelessly and effortlessly and got the job done.  Plus they have a pretty good Chief Technical Officer there also.