Formula 1 Season 2021 – Red Bull Racing
Part I: Foundations, Flashpoints, and the Opening Act of a Championship War
Why 2021 Is Not Just “The First Verstappen Title”
The 2021 Formula One season was not a championship battle.It was a systemic collision between two philosophies, two eras, and two interpretations of what Formula One should be.
Red Bull Racing did not merely challenge Mercedes in 2021 — they overthrew a dynasty that had controlled the sport since 2014. To understand Red Bull’s 2021 season properly, it must be framed not as a single title win, but as the culmination of:
- seven years of Mercedes dominance,
- regulatory compression,
- personnel continuity at Milton Keynes,
- and the maturation of Max Verstappen into a title-calibre weapon.
Organisational Foundations Entering 2021
Team Leadership and Structure
At the start of 2021, Red Bull Racing’s senior structure was unusually stable:- Christian Horner – Team Principal
- Adrian Newey – Chief Technical Officer
- Pierre Waché – Technical Director
- Jonathan Wheatley – Sporting Director
- Gianpiero Lambiase – Verstappen’s Race Engineer
- Hannah Schmitz – Principal Strategy Engineer
The RB16B – A Car Built for One Job
Red Bull’s 2021 car, the RB16B, was not a clean‑sheet design. It was a refinement weapon, an evolution of the RB16 built specifically to:- maximise front‑end authority,
- generate confidence on turn‑in,
- and unlock Verstappen’s aggressive rotation style.
This philosophy would define the season.
Drivers – Hierarchy by Design
Max Verstappen – The Centre of Gravity
By 2021, Verstappen was no longer a prodigy.He was the core of Red Bull’s project, with:
- absolute technical focus,
- full strategic priority,
- and direct design feedback loops through Newey and Waché.
Sergio Pérez – The Strategic Variable
Sergio Pérez was hired for one reason:to break Mercedes’ two‑car advantage.
Fresh from his Sakhir 2020 win at Bahrain International Circuit, Pérez brought:
- tyre management expertise,
- strategic patience,
- and race‑craft in traffic.
He was expected to interfere with Hamilton and Bottas.
Race 1–3: Bahrain, Imola, Portimão
The Tone Is Set
Bahrain Grand Prix – Bahrain International Circuit
The season opened with immediate clarity.At Sakhir, Red Bull looked faster. Verstappen took pole and controlled most of the race, but lost victory to Lewis Hamilton due to:
- track limits enforcement inconsistencies,
- Verstappen giving the position back after an overtake at Turn 4,
- and Mercedes’ late‑race defensive control.
- Red Bull had the car
- The margin for error would be zero
Emilia‑Romagna Grand Prix – Imola
At Imola, Red Bull struck back.In mixed conditions at the Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, Verstappen decisively passed Hamilton on Lap 1, Turn 2, asserting physical dominance into Tamburello.
Red Bull’s strategy, executed by Hannah Schmitz under Safety Car conditions, neutralised Mercedes’ recovery attempts. Verstappen won. The message was sent.
Portuguese Grand Prix – Portimão
At Portimão, Mercedes adapted.Hamilton’s tyre management and Red Bull’s inability to force degradation swings allowed Mercedes to reclaim momentum. Verstappen finished second — close, controlled, but not victorious.
The opening trilogy closed 1–2 either way.
This would not be a runaway.
Spain to Monaco: Diverging Strengths
Spanish Grand Prix – Circuit de Barcelona‑Catalunya
At Barcelona, Mercedes executed a classic two‑stop strategy.Red Bull boxed Verstappen early, attempting to pre‑empt Hamilton. Mercedes reacted by going long, then deploying fresher tyres late. Hamilton passed Verstappen cleanly into Turn 1.
This was a textbook Mercedes race — and a warning that Red Bull could not afford strategic rigidity.
Monaco Grand Prix – Circuit de Monaco
Then came Monaco.At the most track‑position‑sensitive circuit in Formula One, Red Bull were untouchable.
Verstappen inherited victory after Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc failed to start from pole. Pérez finished third, executing a defensive masterclass in traffic around:
- La Rascasse
- Mirabeau
- Portier
Verstappen led the championship for the first time.
Azerbaijan to France: The Volatility Phase
Azerbaijan Grand Prix – Baku City Circuit
Baku was chaos.Verstappen led comfortably until a high‑speed tyre failure on the main straight sent his RB16B into the wall at over 300 km/h. Pérez later won the restarted race after Hamilton famously locked up at Turn 1.
Red Bull gained points — but lost psychological certainty.
French Grand Prix – Circuit Paul Ricard
At Paul Ricard, Red Bull delivered one of their best wins of the season.A bold two‑stop call allowed Verstappen to hunt Hamilton down and pass him on the final lap into Turn 10. This was pure strategy, executed perfectly by the pit wall.
This victory mattered.
It showed Red Bull could beat Mercedes on Mercedes terms.
State of Play After 7 Rounds
After:- Bahrain
- Imola
- Portimão
- Spain
- Monaco
- Baku
- France
- Tight points
- Escalating aggression
- Increasing steward scrutiny
- Two teams operating at maximum political pressure