24 Mar 2025

Christian Horner says Red Bull will support 'struggling' Liam Lawson

6:45 am on 24 March 2025
LAWSON Liam (nzl), Red Bull Racing RB21, portrait, during the Formula 1 Heineken Chinese Grand Prix 2025, 2nd round of the 2025 FIA Formula One World Championship from March 21 to 23, 2025 on the Shanghai International Circuit, in Shanghai, China.

Liam Lawson, who started 20th, finished 12th thanks to three disqualifications, some issues with other cars and a number of overtakes. Photo: DPPI via AFP / Eric Alonso

Red Bull will support struggling Liam Lawson as best they can, team boss Christian Horner said after the New Zealander drew a blank for the second race in a row in China with questions being asked about his Formula One future.

Lawson has replaced Mexican Sergio Perez alongside four-times Formula One champion Max Verstappen in one of the toughest jobs in the sport.

The 23-year-old Lawson did not finish the Australian opener and was 12th in Shanghai after qualifying last and starting from the pitlane. He also failed to score in Saturday's sprint.

Verstappen meanwhile is second in the standings.

The situation has raised questions about how long Red Bull will give Lawson, with Japan's Yuki Tsunoda on good form at sister team Racing Bulls and eager for a swap.

"Liam is a great little racer. He gets his elbows out, he races hard. He's just struggling at the moment, finding the limit with this car and getting the most out of the car," Horner told Sky Sports television.

"As a team, as a group, we're looking to support him in the best way that we can."

Red Bull F1 team boss Christian Horner.

Red Bull F1 team boss Christian Horner. Photo: PHOTOSPORT

Horner recognised that Red Bull needed both drivers scoring to have a hope of reclaiming the constructors' title from McLaren.

"You need to have a second car in play. You can't just do it one-legged," he said.

Lawson said on Saturday he did not have the luxury of time, meaning also time in a car that even Verstappen has said is tricky to drive, and Horner did not offer much immediate support.

"Formula One is a pressure business, isn't it?," he said. "There's always time pressure. He knows that. Hopefully he'll respond accordingly and we'll see where we go."

Lawson said the team had tried to do something different with the set-up and it had not worked, with the car less competitive than in the Saturday sprint.

"It's just something I've got to get on top of as quickly as I can," he added.

"I want to be at the front and I will just keep working to try and achieve that."

Lawson doubted that former team mate Tsunoda, passed up for the seat but with a home race in Japan next up, would do any better.

"He can honestly say whatever he wants," he said of the Racing Bull driver offering his services. "I've raced him for years, raced him in junior categories and beat him. And I did in F1 as well."

Horner told reporters later there was "always going to be speculation in the paddock. We've only just finished the race here. We'll take away the info and have a good look at it."

-Reuters

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