Hadjar knows how he can make the difference as Verstappen's teammate

17:30, 02 Jan
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Isack Hadjar knows where the key lies for him to start the 2026 Formula 1 season well. Max Verstappen’s new teammate points to the winter break.
“It won’t be fun, but I do believe that’s where I can make the difference.”
- Isack Hadjar
After a strong rookie season in Formula 1, Hadjar faces the biggest challenge of his career in 2026. He will have to go up against four-time world champion Verstappen at Red Bull Racing, the man many consider the best driver on the grid right now.
Verstappen has already devoured many of his previous teammates at Red Bull. After Daniel Ricciardo’s departure, Pierre Gasly, Alexander Albon, Sergio Perez, Liam Lawson and Yuki Tsunoda all didn’t last very long.
Hadjar therefore knows a daunting task awaits him, but he told GPblog that he knows where he can make the difference.

Hadjar wants to make the difference

“To get to Red Bull, I had to do my best here (at Racing Bulls). So I wasn’t paying attention on what the big boys were doing. Now my focus will change, though.”
“I can’t wait to go to MK (Milton Keynes, where the Red Bull factory is) and work with the guys there in January and February. It won’t be fun, but I do believe that’s where I can make the difference.”
“The car hasn’t been built yet and there’s only one tool available: the sim. So there’s a lot to do. I could allow myself more holidays, but what’s the point?”
Isack Hadjar.jpg
Isack Hadjar knows how to approach it alongside Max Verstappen - Photo: Red Bull Content Pool
Hadjar also surprised in the interview by saying that he needs to accept beforehand that he will lose the duel with Max Verstappen. According to the Frenchman, Verstappen’s predecessors at Red Bull always went wrong there. They thought they could beat Verstappen; he believes that won’t just happen.
“If anything, the goal is to accept that I'm going to be slower the first month. And I think that if you go into that mindset, you accept already, it's going to be very tough. Looking at the data and seeing things you can't achieve yet, it's going to be very frustrating. But if you know, then you're more prepared.”
That will take some getting used to, even for the Frenchman. “It never happened to me in my life,” he says with a laugh.
Asked by GPblog whether he has, somewhere in the back of his mind, the idea that he could beat the Dutchman, Hadjar explained: “Yeah, I mean, of course, it's like if I was to jump in, if there was another year of these regulations, no way. But you never know, maybe the way you have to drive this guy is suiting me perfectly. And at the same time, it's Max Verstappen."
“He doesn't have a driving style. He adapts to what he's given and that's what is his strength. So he's going to be as good in next year's cars as he's on this year's car and as he was the year before. He's constantly adapting to [it]."
Still, starting a season with the mindset “I’m going to lose anyway” can also feel wrong. Maybe Verstappen’s previous teammates thought that too, which broke them. Hadjar thinks otherwise. He says his predecessors secretly believed they would be faster than Verstappen.

What Verstappen’s teammates did wrong

“I think they thought the opposite. Everyone thinks they're special. And you come in, you're like, ‘he's a human, I'm going to beat him.’ And then you get stomped over. And then the snowball effect starts.”
“Whereas if you come in, you're like, ‘anyway, I'm not [going to be it him],’ And we're talking about the best driver on the grid, so the chance that I'm slower at the start of the year is very high. So might as well accept it now and just walk towards getting there. Of course, I'm hoping to be as fast as him. I'm hoping, but realistically, there's very few chances."
Asked whether this approach is driven by Red Bull management or comes from himself, Hadjar was clear: “Myself.”
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