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“That’s exactly what happened”– Adrian Newey discloses Red Bull’s journey to be fastest car in 2021

Tanish Chachra
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"That's exactly what happened"– Adrian Newey discloses Red Bull's journey to be fastest car in 2021

“That’s exactly what happened”– Adrian Newey discloses Red Bull’s progress to the fastest car in the grid in 2021 to win the championship.

Red Bull entered this season with a massive amount of pace in their car and looked like the biggest contenders to win the championship this year while having a nail-biting contest with Mercedes.

Adrian Newey, who is responsible for building several championship-winning cars, including Red Bull’s dominance in the last decade, has talked about how his team managed to build gaps from 2020 to make the fastest car on the grid this year.

“Last year, at the start of the year there were some things on the car that we in truth didn’t fully understand in terms of the changes between the RB15 in 2019, and the RB16 [in 2020],” Newey explained on Talking Bull.

“It just shows even though we have our entire program, all our simulation, there are still things we don’t fully understand and can trip you up and that’s exactly what happened.”

“So it took us a bit of time to understand and get on top of those. But as is so often the case, when those things happen, then you actually learn things that perhaps you wouldn’t have done otherwise.”

“It’s almost sometimes you can learn more from mistakes, and then come the good things. So I think that stood us in good stead for what we did over the winter.”

All tokens to gearbox change were crucial.

This year, a token system limited the scope of developing cars in 2021, and Red Bull applied all the resources into gearbox development, which turned out to be crucial.

“It [your competitiveness] tends to be very much unknown until you get out on track,” said Newey. “We had a mid-sized regulation change over the winter in terms of some aerodynamic restrictions around the floor and the back of the car, not major ones, but re-optimisation on the car to go with it.

“And then we had what was I think unique, I can’t remember this happening before, this homologation of the previous year’s car into this season, as a result of the COVID problems of last year.

“This meant were very limited on what we could do to the car. But there are tokens that we could spend. We decided to spend those on the gearbox casing and that allowed us to also change the rear suspension arrangements.”

“Which was one thing I didn’t feel had worked that well on the RB16B of last year. So I think that was a decent step forwards. [It] seems like we read the regulation changes on the aerodynamics reasonably well as well.”

Max Verstappen called it ‘a progress.’

During the winter testing, Red Bull seemed ahead of Mercedes, and Verstappen, as per Newey, called it a progress from 2020 and looked forward to the season.

“So when we got testing in Bahrain, instantly they both drive well,” continued Newey. “Sergio [Perez] hadn’t driven the car, of course before, but Max was very complimentary of the car and told us it was a good step forwards on last year’s car.”

“Coming out of the Bahrain testing, we we felt we had a competitive package. But of course, you never know where exactly that’s going to be. You don’t know what engine modes people are running, what fuel loads, and so on and so forth.”

“It’s an endless minefield of trying to understand how competitive you are really are in pre-season. The Bahrain race, we didn’t win it but we showed we were certainly competitive, and it’s been nip and tuck since then really.”

About the author

Tanish Chachra

Tanish Chachra

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Tanish Chachra is the Motorsport editor at The SportsRush. He saw his first race when F1 visited India in 2011, and since then, his romance with the sport has been seasonal until he took up this role in 2020. Reigniting F1's coverage on this site, Tanish has fallen in love with the sport all over again. He loves Kimi Raikkonen and sees a future world champion in Oscar Piastri. Away from us, he loves to snuggle inside his books.

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