Red Bull keep faith with Perez despite slump in form
- Published
Sergio Perez will keep his seat at Red Bull into the second part of the season, the team have said.
The move comes after Red Bull bosses met on Monday to discuss the Mexican’s future after a series of disappointing performances.
A Red Bull spokesperson said team principal Christian Horner told employees in a speech at the team’s base in Milton Keynes that Perez would stay on.
Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf reported that Horner said: “Checo remains a Red Bull Racing driver, despite all the speculation of late. We look forward to seeing him perform on circuits where he has done well before.”
The spokesperson confirmed to BBC Sport that the report was accurate.
There will be no change to the driver line-up of Daniel Ricciardo and Yuki Tsunoda at second team RB, either, the spokesperson said.
Horner had met with other Red Bull bosses to discuss whether to drop Perez from his seat alongside Max Verstappen after the forthcoming summer break. The RB line-up was also on the agenda.
The season resumes at the Dutch Grand Prix on 23-25 August.
- Published29 July
Perez finished seventh in Sunday’s Belgian Grand Prix after starting second on the grid, a performance Red Bull motorsport adviser Helmut Marko described to Sky Germany as “completely collapsing”.
Perez has not finished on the podium since the fourth race of the season in China in April. After finishing fourth in Miami in early May, he has finished seventh three times, eighth twice, 17th once and retired twice.
Perez's poor results have led to Red Bull coming under pressure in the constructors' championship - McLaren have reduced their lead to just 42 points and will take the lead before the end of the season if their current rate of gain continues.
Verstappen leads the drivers' championship by 78 points and has won seven of this year’s 14 races.
However, amid a slump in form for Red Bull, the three-time champion has not won since the Spanish Grand Prix in June, five races ago.
Red Bull had been considering whether to drop Perez and replace him with either Ricciardo or their reserve driver Liam Lawson.
Just two months ago, Perez signed a new contract with the team aimed at keeping him at Red Bull to the end of 2026.
After the race in Belgium, Perez’s patience with continued questions about his future appeared to run out.
"We have too much going on in the team and a lot of things that we have to focus on, and we cannot waste any energy with all this speculation,” he said.
"This is the last time I will speak about the future. So just to make it clear for everyone, I will not be speaking anymore. I will not answer any more questions about the future.”